Title | English botany, or, coloured figures of British plants, with their essential characters, synonyms, and places of growth. Volume 5 |
Subject | Botany--Great Britain |
Creator | Language |
Description | James Sowerby was an English naturalist, illustrator and mineralogist. He studied painting at the Royal Academy in London. This is the second of his illustrated volumes of English botany, issued in parts from 1790 to 1814. The work is in thirty-six volumes with more than twenty-five hundred hand-colored plates. An enormous number of plants were to receive their first formal publication within this work, but the authority for these came from the initially unattributed text written by James Edward Smith. |
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Sree ~vies Lee eee to * “PO 4 ¥ SR NEN SMR COR ONC Te ae fa ae A : ooaC ie a ee rac) COR : A ne M5) aA Fae] a RE @NSI2e°%s, oO(25, ee OS PO Als 09; a me wae arsa a ae 2 Oey 3 *%,, 5) aaa te i Dee ee> re 5 “7 cy DES Mo VEG 95 DKS, DK 95 DHS, DH, Meron, Dkersrea, DKS My el Os i a 2 DAS 0 DEE Mee DEG eo a eee ea Re aC ENGLISH BOTANY; COLOURED FIGURES OR ate OF BRITISH PLANTS, THEIR PR WiTH ie ESSENTIAL CHARACTERS, SYNONYMS, PLACES OF GROWTH. Ce a AND er TO WHICH WILL BE ADDED, REMARKS. iy L OCCASIONAL é BY JAMES i EDWARD SMITH, M.D. F.R.S. MEMBER OF THE ACADEMIES OF STOCKHOLM, TURIN, UPSAL, LUND, PHILADELPHIA, ETC. x oFy Fd PRESIDENT x OF THE LINNEAN LISBON, SOCIETY. THE FIGURES BY JAMES SOWERBY, F.L.8. we RSS TS Sette ee ere) SO et ¢} oe VIRESQUE ACQUIRIT EUNDO.” Virg. VOL. V. ——— OL Chae Cee Or Cie a LONDON: PRINTED FOR THE EDITOR, And sold at No. 2, Mead Place, near the Asylum; by Messrs. Wutre, Booksellers, Fleet-street ; JouNnson, St. Paul’s Church-yard ; Ditty, in the Poultry; and by all Booksellers, &c. in ‘Town and Country, he MDCCXCVI. at es JAC Che LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF : De CR PY eeee 1 Cte Pe eee rT) el ‘A i De AU Nee re Cwe, Ssleeee Cs Oa SO ee TPry PD IKE Mo LAE ; ie re ots ha he pera ee Oe en a ao UTAH en ce aie ce c) Ree Te te oC Be i de otA PD Bar veo tad Pid 5 AC} ae a of Oa : | 5 ; m K PAS oy a ! 7 o je he | Cs Ske... ta L co) aa SS q eae BaP| Chee ee ek Deer UJ vy ae el eee) SS ee te Ce FE Oe Tea thd ee ie ee ate ome e Ay & ned ,a 5 a fe re>. I Pane Chin The le 7% ic) ss DG, DG HC ; , “tq DG, D5 | DH ic .ne D3kCers, I t es ie ae o Oe She >oes Otis “Sa77, Ow ete . he Sa ee Se = rrr re ROD of el Dr eee | re a nr ak wey Ta eS nS OS ser oe de ' 3 ed ie , Ma ie ee ’ , - et MyDS Cae ad rh oPe - Ot te af CO Da Pe Oat ‘nm OO a a ni Red. ae Ce ied Sos ; a EN i P24 DHE(e | Fs,"“ A) Oe <A . \ ny rae [ 289 -] SATYRIUM repens. Creeping Satyrion. SSeS ae Gen. Cuar. GYNANDRIA Diandria. Nectary an inflated roundish bag behind BS ae Leaves ovate, Syn. ee cn the flower. Spec. Cuar. Roots fibrous, creeping. radical. Flowers leaning one way. ACCORDING to the custom we have hithert o adopted of beginning each volume with some peculia rly interesting plant, Huds. tee ae COS eee communicated it to Mr. James Hoy, rte eee as Mr. Hoy himself has informed us since our account of that plant was published. This Satyrium grows in Alpine fir forests, notin « pastures and thickets.” “Our specimens were sent fresh from Scotland by the post, and came in perfectly good order, as plants of this tribe dry so very slowly. The roots are perennial, truly creep ing, not bulbous, very succulent, downy, running among moss, and attaching themselves to decayed fragments and leaves of fir in the manner of fungi. Leaves in tufts at the end of each runner, on broad sheathing footstalks, ovate, succu lent, strongly 5- or 7-ribbed, and reticulated with transy h are often brown, and the leaves are now an colour. Stalks erect, 6 or wh, » downy upwards, clothed with a few altern ate sheathing bractez, terminated with an erect spike of numerous pale flesh-coloured fragrant flowers, leaning one way, but turning a little spirally round the stalk; each being accompanied by a lanceolate, concave, coloured, downy bracte a, which also is clothed with viscid longer than the germen, downiness, as well as the three broader external petals. Haller describes the flower as having only three petals, besides the nectary, which Lightfoot copies, having probably never seen the plant alive, for his plate is excessively faulty. Mr. lanceolate petals (as in the figure Sowerby found two internal ) which, like those of Orchis ustulata, are very difficult to be detected in a dried specimen, being “ glued as it were” to the upper one, which the others are not by any means, though that great naturalist might makeHaller Says they are. Perhaps confuse himself in copying them slight notes in the field, and afterwards. Lightfoot’s account is compiled from Haller’s whole book is nearly made up without acknowlec gment. His of such plagiarisms, and he is hence often deservedly led astra y. 7 Pe ate inn. Sp. Pl. 1889. we here exhibit one of the most rare of the favourite Orchis tribe, for which we are obliged to James Brodie, Esq. the gentleman who discovered Pyrola uniflor a (t. 146.) in Scotland, and ° = eS Sea a repens. a rn 9) } Chee ed ee, Oka Ay, 2 y ~e Or V °G S ee em, Gy ib Satyrium £1. An. 887.. With. Bot. Arr. 989, Lighif. Fi. Sc. 520. f. 22. bad. Dicks. Dr. Pl. 85. te eC | re is Se en we OAcG Pio) be hd ey a 4.9 En a 7 Oy ae Ss So G ot Fae "a ao te %s a bh} n Se ae DEC, Qa av Ae a os pe e liane Otel Clb Dee p ‘ Cite ha . el Oh ne a CO F y COR Sia See . ie eS CR Ml < a e 80, DIKG “te, A 9 8a DEEG Cy CS eg On or SOY a Ce a LY NE 7 r 6 No se ee ee DSe te, eT ee ars en OO CL eae Soe @ a)" “tel 7s a a Pease ae Cae i : eT ’ — oe i i) OlySe oe) ° si So i) “Seq, a FS hy i Oe Dr ede ain 3ee Ola 1 teal wa Oh Pe 2S ahs | = : ae at Opes \ Pe > Che yk ls ee ae as mm Se eo) SHG. x o ZS KG iid eG F iteeth , Oa Dc 0 bad ed y Ss he SS ee ed ore dS Pte ie a eg cdRs ee oe a aes wy Ss. [ 290 ] mn ARS oR oa oN oe S CN NARDUS 6$sstricta. Mat-grass. eR TRIANDRIA Gen. CuHar. Spec. CuHar. Cal. none. Spike pointing one way. Syn. Nardus stricta. Monogynia. Corolla of 2 valves. slender, erect, Linn. Sp. Pl. 77. ee ae Te) An. 22. | With. Bot. Arr. 54. Sibth.. Ox. 33. Gramen sparteum juncifolium. flowers all Huds. Fi. Relh. Cant. 21. Raii Syn. 393. pee, Ee eee the a ce a a ee er te et Turis a grass may be observed on sandy heaths in most parts it of England, especially in moist or moorish spots, where forms thick tufts of rigid rush-like leaves, which remain ; rs through winter ‘‘ bleaching in the northern blast.” The roots are perennial, fibrous, strong and downy. Leaves linear, very narrow, acute, striated, rough in the margin, very harsh and rigid, suddenly divaricating from their broad sheathing striated base, which envelops the bottom of the stalk, and is itself enveloped with scales externally, and crowned at the divarication with the usual stipula of grasses. Each stalk supports one leaf, and is erect, striated, rough, of the same texa ture and harshness as the leaves, and a little longer, bearing very slender spike of equally slender flowers, alternately placed in two rows, but all pointing one way, though very little divaricated at any time from the stalk, and both before and after flowering clapped close to it. Valves of the calyx unequal Filaments a in length, purplish and rough in the margin. little exceeding the longest valve, tipped with nearly linear Style solitary, slender, downy. Germen small. anther. The Mat-grass flowers in May, June, or later. Of its agricultural uses little can be said, for cattle in general refuse it; and though mats or baskets might be made of it, we are supplied from Spain with better grasses for those purposes, particularly Stipa tenacissuma. FE tf era F a 5 ee, OT ee ee nC 7 PD ee awd a ohten | roe woA 3 > i A Bi es . oe See 7) i Oe oe Bias OREae’ Sey, Ns ay hin “a | a Oe Ce PDat Sete \e = Oh teSOS J PN a Dd Ti Eras mn oe + os ie Clie Be 5 ed Ml Tete ih tte theo Ot seems i CO es oe de OCS cade eee gS rit ied =o Cte ihe es Fe es Ro art Ss AU 6 a ear grr mre ES Ee a e er ee a ES + eames LOT Ea OTS a Ch te OL ———— 2 cS ; a “se, im 3 te By *e, Dek On sr) — ae) te hee > Y cv) ee SO . p24 STO wit a er ad > eee a ms “ a) : EO e. ceA pe ee a Oe) “Seats a a sa OO reeRS Oa ee aere Sie 7 CS Ps ee EES oo DSS wiposeceteccatinnaeee Sire as Cha ae aVa x? ®, e. BMG > 7 QMS aer Sey -Nias — Oe $e hedee ae oe "| | hoor’ a fi \ “oe eee ee ie CR ie 3 ce5 etn Ce te ei | hae rar 9 rN de G i [ 291 e 4 Fa. > Cle tated s ee, 3 iz ay SILENE noctiflora. Night-flowering Catchfly. DECANDRIA CN re Gen. Cuar. Trigynia. Petals 5, with claws, and Cal. swelling. with acrown at the mouth. Caps. three-celled. and teeth as long angles, ten Calyx with Spec. Cuar. as its tube. Sls Cj “te ry 5 ae 7 Syn. Silene Stem forked. noctiflora. en iV ee Sp. Pl. 599. Fl. An. 189. With. Bot. Arr. 452. Lychnis noctiflora. Raii Syn. 340. Suppl. 1. 13. Sibth. Ox, 140. Huds. Relh. Cant. roa Bs PR EW faa eC | Petals cloven. Linn. r ee In sandy fields of the midland and southern counties, not rare in Norfolk and Suffolk, flowering about July. Root annual, small in proportion to the herb, which often becomes very luxuriant in a manured soil. Stem erect, round, hairy, leafy, repeatedly forked in the upper part. Leaves soft and downy, lanceolate, sessile, the lower ones broadest, and Flowers solitary at the divisions of the the lowest obovate. stem, on hairy viscid stalks, which are short at first, but afterCalyx white, with wards lengthened out to about an inch. green angles and veins, its teeth almost as long as the tubular ‘ Fi “> % 7 @ v3 iT et Y me f F Fs Ol Te, ae ng part. srs e Sl e 7 sf rolled then warm days, Petals of a cream colour tinged with red, their limb in during the day, but unfolding in the evening, and the flowers become very sweet-scented, at least while weather continues. We believe each flower lasts several the petals rolling themselves up every evening till the impregnation is fully accomplished. If so, how is this invo- ae Pe yet Age aaie Does the action of light upon the upper lution performed? The surface of each petal stimulate that surface to contract? phenomena of such flowers as expand or smell only by night, 9 “Sen/7> ee deserve the attention of the physiologist, for they are ruled by ete e. S\Si7*%s5 » ad ae Tt ye Ate” a) a ad 79 a We recommend them to the evening very constant laws. meditations of the philosophic recluse, at ‘* that best hour of musing” when the mind turns to Nature and its Author with peculiar complacency. “>in et hs ee . oe Lier OO 2 ek) i is POP 7 Se 23 iar; Salo ~ ~ rin ae ee es ae ~E~ TOSS a SCO “47° ort S ox ic @. a) ce aah ica i. A 0 r ’ ste) Marcha Bi th Miron yA Bie A PX Ha wd a A Pir u ro Vie *sa G5"2- Phin ey yee dllcat e DG's ; ee Dipak Dies A Binet aaa A Min hash Mie hank Mie isk Di aa tie re “Oe. Sef 79 bd " adie eS ask cae ea a) a e a rey Ta _ ee, coi " en, ut SN 2 eee is nee oC nC (omni m , Pe Cana SCE CaO #39.) Soa anette 5. aj G62 8) 4 Chaat [ 292] LYTHRUM hyssopifolium. Hyssop-leaved Grass-poly. DODECANDRIA Gen. Cuar. Te ee Spec. CHAR. mina six. é* Syn. $3 , Petals 6, inserted Capsule with 2 cells, and many Leaves alternate, linear-lanceolate. Lythrum hyssopifolium. Szbth. Ox. Sta- 149. L. Hyssopifolia. Linn. Sp. Pl. 642. Huds. Fl. An. 206. With. Bot. Arr. 490. Relh. Cant. 183. Salicaria Hyssopi folio latiore, et angustiore. Raii . Syn. 367. £ i eS ONE of our rarer English plants, for which we are obliged to the Rev. Mr. Abbot of Bedford and the Rev. Mr. Hemsted of Newmarket. It grows in pits and ditches which are partly ried up, or in places where water has stagnated during winter. The root is annual, tapering, and not much branched. Stems several; the principal erect, often branched; lateral ones spreading and curved upwards; all square, purplish, smooth, clothed with numerous, alternate, smooth, entire, linear-lanceolate leaves, some of which now and then approach to an elliptical figure. Flowers solitary, axillary, sessile, delicate and short-lived, appearing in July, purple, and of a regular figure, as we think all true species of Lythrum ought to be, though Linnzus has admitted some with very unequal petals. They have generally 12 teeth to the calyx, alternately erect and spreading, 6 petals, and as many stamina; but some flowers have only 10 teeth, 5 petals and 5 stamina, or (as Linneus says) exclude a sixth part of the natural number in their fructification. The seeds are exceedingly numerous and ee), Olehen leis RO OS eS Cal lv Oe ee ee eee g . ‘ ? . Cal. with 12 teeth. into the calyx. seeds. Monogynia. minute, a 7. é . aC a bd er, _We have ventured, with professor Sibthorp, to make the Linnean substantive specific name into an adjective, as on tormer occasions where it could be done. eat~s p Nee |. BS ee - As ps a] CE Se Fe Ss ee eee an» ee ae > SS Pe he op ee es eI ee . ee; Payfi ee al) ae) ee aes re re IE ee kG "4a, eS SO Saas te, eee re iO FR @ oN ee RT. i P Oe ; ea ee u ie kk ; a A is re oa Ps : M ee ee Mae Ae ee cy Bin akon Mien AA ee Fa ee Tr CG KA e ; ACeBher ook Ean eter eee A Rihba . A o - PT Ai A osi7? ea Thal ln Ak eT pe iach ae 402° iinet a eee DE AN ¢ y id e _ hee eS p a a fas a) te “s pan Dr Saal:D5 \ 2°. ol » Es ee 7 Ke pes, so) 7 Me DEG M9, oz ae NS a OG” ‘e5% () <6 \J %)5 i) ae 3be > So = ed ta ? hd iSOR he is oy = id >< Othe Ped hte Ped Cie . CS a ee be sete a" Oe A ci el Chit L SCiee Ci iee ObataCORD aie i tee 5 = rs y Pons” ~~. ail oe eS aay a Cle ae "D a 44,9 io ee Oe ee Pe aA pen ciate [ 295 LICHEN ee. Ball-bearing Lichen. eee —————— TO CRYPTOGAMIA Alge. Gen. CHAR. Male, scattered warts. Female, smooth shields or tubercles, in which the seeds are imbedded. Spec. CHar. Foliaceous, creeping, even and glaucous above, bearing dark-green, branched, tufted excrescences. Shields tawny. Syn. Lichen glomuliferus. Lightf. Scot. 853. L. laciniatus. Auds. Fl. An. 544. . With. Bot. Arr. PREC els Ee ] glomuliferus. éBA v. 3. 198, Lichenoides subglaucum cumatile, foliis tenacibus, eleganter laciniatis. Dill. Musc. 197. t. 26. f. 99. %} ee rd Turis is by far the largest and broadest Lichen known, often measuring two or three feet in diameter, and therefore Scopoli’s original name amplissimus ought not to have been changed; but Mr. Lightfoot’s is so apt, and has been so generally adopted by practical botanists, we retain it in preference to that given by Mr. Hudson, Jaciniatus, which is not expressive nor discriminative at all. Lichen glomuliferus is found on the trunks of trees in old mountainous woods in England, Scotland, and Wales, very abundantly in Colonel Johnes’s woods at Hafod, where ours was gathered. Its fronds spread loosely over the bark, a little imbricated, of a pale glaucous green above when moist, whitish grey when dry, very smooth, scarcely ever rugged; beneath e ee et ee, ee a eet a ‘ a Tt ee ene Per ee ee D downy, light reddish brown, the margin white. They are elegantly lobed and scalloped, the lobes being all round, and t the little sinuses between them often quite circular. The shields ey oe CT one —_ \ (fP Z ae ewe ASAE Aas 3 . ‘ SX aa. Wedd og are numerous, and by no means very rarely produced, not large, a little elevated, their margin smooth, of the colour and substance of the frond, out of which indeed it is formed by the gradual elevation and increase of the shield from a small immersed point; the disk is concave, of a brownish orangecolour, darker when dry. Besides these shields remarkable tufts or balls, of a dark-green soft branchy substance, with a : a Pg solid white stem, Chee nat a Pa of ee eS | tt. SAN pg i A ag ee Pee) Are) is ee Oe ea C‘IG aD ®\44 7°82 la 22S Se IES UDG reer. Dict rer AEG “a, DEG, arise out of the frond. ‘These are more fre- quent than the shields, found on the same individual plants, and distinguish the species, being supposed to have a share in the fructification. We will not add any new conjectures to those to be found in Withering and Lightfoot, in both which authors this curious plant is well described. DG en FO i ca re ee ant On Ss * &oe Al Pe SEG.) BS G pon G* bay SO ft’ Md tea eed dS in he S| re Oo hd rs Cie ote = Seteae ee DG ta Ee ec ee eee 4 ae OE NE Oe ta Pn Be al Rt a Lad et ro & am ack Meare Rhee ack Meta i Mes acsk Mies ak lien ck Minsk Dian ash tila © &-aret ae wee ee aE Se ae ee se x Bi ac A aia rd On a ar a) oe Cie ae 45 ‘. Scot cw)SC Fe Vv mpm = We Se p> + an od Ce 7 re “Ces wis co) J Pes TaN SS ey he mJ ~ y cf TY C) ‘ “Se a OS y Cie ° See et a » > ed mers - ae Pe . a a bo > 3 Cte of) hee albe K — Te Se . vary Sold ee Ray 2 at as ia ed Oe ena a TOT LICHEN lete-virens. Bright-green Lichen. enti —— 2. CRYPTOGAMIA Alge. Pe ee SAO Ee l “= 3 Oe CN , Male, scattered warts. “Gen. Cuar. Female, smooth shields or tubercles, in which the seeds are imbedded. Foliaceous, creeping, obtusely lobed and Spec. CHAR. crenated; bright green above; whitish, downy and Shields tawny. without veins beneath. 55 Za a ee VJ Syn. Oe &6 ld 7 aT ab. Lightf. Scot. 852. Dicks. With. Bot. Arr. vu, 3. 196. Lichenoides arboreum cinereo virens, tenue et lave Raii Syn. 73. ubique, scutellis minoribus. Musc. 195. t. 25. Dill. L. lete virens, scutellis fulvis. : Ca 7; mete « et f. 98. "6% Lichen is next akin to that in our last plate, but a Tuts name perfectly distinct species. We prefer Mr. Lightfoot’s regenerally most been has it because also in this instance, which green beautiful y peculiarl the of e expressiv is ceived, and Besides, herbaceus in this plant assumes when moistened. : M > Py Ps to botanical language is too generally used to express duration, ¥ e be intelligible when applied to colour. with the The species before us is found in similar places ae) preceding, but more frequently, especially in Derbyshire and ir it i Lichen lete-virens. Dr. Fi. @. L. herbaceus. Huds. Fl. An. 544. ° It differs from that in being thinner, less exWestmoreland. tufted excrescences, and of a very different the tensive, without y colour. When dry it becomes brown. The shields are copiousl > Py F:e produced, FS a little elevated, their margin smooth, their disk deep orange, turning brown in drying. ¢9 >) B J Oo) “a. . Ss " a ee ee bea @ 4° 2? OR ee oe eNOS “aac 2. Al aee) Re ee NSS ORES as turned in, A Rare RS Fae Sea G9 , Ore a Cin ms Se SS a OOS pe ae Va ee res ek eee RO ee Va ee ek Bie it tern oF ae ac ch Minas Ohh ak Mets Aiea AOR ORL A Rene iMate Ake SOE oe *¢ Fee 2 spre a eet eae Oe 3S ~ eer a ar ren ‘" Me ROS Sie) A Aree ae ne, 7 Cie, ee Fat a eae a * a wos Di ra 5, Ne rn UE ! } Nea Tie ak ia , J ea a ie eS ie ie OeNs Oe we : ee fe | > eS “ > or yy ori id ba Pe tee pa al 3 ¥ ‘ ei Lo 266. >) #3 P : &» 4 oy 4 ys ae Py f ~ i, 3 ag = S perforatum. HYPERICUM Perforated St. John’s Wort. Wns WBE i PY POLYADELPHIA Py C) Gen. Cuar. ee ‘ Fy r) * >} Pe oie ae ee Syn. Se Cat Cap- Hypericum perforatum. Linn. Sp. Pl. 1105. Huds. Fl. An. 333. With. Bot. Arr. 813. Relh. Sibth. Ox. 234. Curt. Lond. fase. 1. Cant. 288. Med. Bot. 29. t. 10. Woodv. t. 57. aii Syn. 342. Hypericum. ca bd co .O) Pa 3 7 as or AN extremely common plant in groves, thickets, and under hedges, flowering about July and August. Its woody creeping perennial roots make it very difficult to be extirpated. They throw up numerous stems, about two feet high, perfectly erect, leafy, roundish, but marked with two prominent lines running down from the insertion of every Leaves pair of leaves, which render the stem two-edged. Ree aL CC SL a oa nw ' Filaments nu- sule roundish. Leaves Stem two-edged. Stylesthree. Spec. Car. obtuse, sprinkled with pellucid dots, Calyx-leaves lanceolate. 3 Fa Petals 5. merous, united at the base into 3or Ssets. <9 os a>) d Cal. 5-cleft. Polyandria, opposite, each pair crossing those below them, oblong, some- Ca a Ra what elliptical, bluntish, entire, with one main rib and several straight veins springing from it, paler and somewhat glaucous beneath, sprinkled with numerous green pellucid dots, easily seen when held against the light, and marked besides with a few dark purple opaque dots, especially on the margin. A short simple leafy branch arises from the bosom of each leaf, the upper ones bearing flowers, and forming a forked leafy panicle terminating the stem, The flowers are bright yellow, and not inelegant, Calyx-leaves and petals, as well lanceolate, pointed, entire. Petals entire at one edge, crenate at the other. Anthere tipped with a dark purple gland, Stigmas whitish in our specimens, though by some writers described as crimson. The edges of the calyx as their external surface, are marked with ds, ra ors dark purple spots and lines, containing a red essential oil soluble in spirits, but the aromatic qualities of the herb appear not to be confined to these spots. Pp ap eS | aE tae 5 ee i ad ri es Oe as Be te Hause, sil Oe a O42i220 i ' ’ FF Bin Se " ae —_— rar: , . ORIN SCT SEND mem OIA RS “CGA ENG Mig Ley ELIE Pei) e al cre aE Ce Cie ia Ni ak Mik Bes eX net ‘Oe ee rte a Wy aC) re es re Bask Bin Ak i vt iG Tet hs She « gS : Te Ete Ce ee < sets, : eed A ian hk tha ask Minas 5 iba rack ier rk dC tte Peek aC en eee Sk A a ine oe 06 RG iz wee ees aaa Oe caink lions diik liana iinasthaiiltiaihi . Se SO er Se tin eS| " 3. * e ees a 57 a aoe VF aan oN ie ~at,. ts aed en. ye - ene 232 IAG oo a ae 2yi ) & Pa, DE eh) » oe ie cy St the Pe Se Ce) ies 7 a ie ‘Othe Bas pe i ore we a on 5) oe ae) aL oe iS eat Cie Om eCS Oke RS Some F Re LEONE ete ed nO OP ied ae, ORs ie kT ees | :: Tetra 7 n ws ny ~The wes var) ee a ¥ Jr or res ete Wee @ ee OS” denomination, and found it himself very abundantly last ee, August about Colonel Johnes’s delightful and romantic place at Hafod, Cardiganshire, as well as in Mr. Knight’s fine woods at Downton Castle near Ludlow, where it is much More common than the perforatum. It may perhaps be found in other parts of our island when accurately sought for. In habit, size, and colour, this plant very nearly agrees ‘of with the perforatum, but differs essentially from that species Ory eC ae Be, a) re Gt, DK im having no pellucid dots apparent on the leaves, and in the calyx-leaves being elliptical and obtuse. The latter indeed, and even the bractez, are sprinkled with pellucid dots and lines, and the petals, as well as the edges of the leaves, marked with opaque purple, as in that; but in addition to the above differences, the stem of H. dubium is in the upper part almost quadrangular; and it may even be known before it romes po) out of the ground, by the much more vivid red of the - . wager ry a P| OME aI “iy ZN VA Pay, ihe Lye say Fawn my A ee G Rs, a » ts EG Obie Ee ia tts, 5 5 young shoots, Pa) cy 2 ’ Sd ds or a Ra Dy ad Tuat this is a most distinct species of Hypericum from the perforatum and all others there can be no doubt, though it seems to have escaped the notice of every author except the accurate Leers, not being mentioned even as a variety by any other that we can find. Neither is it, as Leers was induced to suspect, the H. perfoliatum of Linneus. This addition to our cata~ logue of British natives was discovered in July 1794 by Dr. John Seward of Worcester, growing plentifully about Sapey in that county, and was ascertained by the Rev. Mr. Douglas to be the H. duliwm of Leers. Dr. Smith has received it from Switzerland, by favour of Mr. Davall, under the same J oJ J aa rs Pa Ca 0 rs "9 Chr y wip ee ed “a 6 1635. coe ay 1 Jeers Fi. Herborn. ——_—_— ——— Te | Hypericum dubium. eee SYN. aC leaves elliptical. WS ma y y at ent } ge GG, ee pt at ae g 49 on \ \ Spec. Cuar. Styles three. Stem obsoletely four-edged. Leaves obtuse, destitute of pellucid dots. Calyx- } SF & ara a ie ‘ah t nlp us eo ce oe ef") $(0 bd \ =’ O als 2° & 30 bt ip > 7 a 1 J \// bs oe \ CO \\ “Ey QW) a { wahad Are ey \ OO pigaes Polyandria, Gen. Coar. Cal. 5-cleft. Petals 5. Filaments numerous, united at the base into 3 or 5 sets. Capsule roundish. ? Oe POLYADELPHIA W a0 ; : of? 20 , \ {4 > 4 - Imperforate St. John’s Wort. pales (ol wiih{é \ a\\\ ACh one) HYPERICUM § dubium. ie, M 296] Oe Ae ee | YY Pats e ee eA Pee) “IGS VF aA ie 1 MIG] a, OE EZ MLSS , . “MaatJ ass al) ee e Pe Sane re PS eo ey } OR * " f, Cth a ae LOM OR Pas Poe Oia A ii a er * ed Rh ees) Oe Cher Ais el ik | si 777. eT ern UT ae yy POE, CORR tL Ce ee tt ask Bie oa A Ri ie Gs Pe) PL Te Va rE tel | Md Fa . Ones cack Mane rk thee pack Mantas i Mins ask ines CBee A iheeek Wh ona a - . J sk Miter tik Minera Dinh ihe dak i > nC} we, 72 ay)Oakes ret) -% oe Or Men .i a Rak Cb LER, ss a eA ele ta,.: 9) S Cie the Ota ars hd > CS ba bs SEG. OKC Pa an ties ees s ee a, eae J n ) Oeee li i ester? OR ; a ie ee ae RS ad Cie he ee ie a Rie a aC ) ee ee re7 nog . Nk eT os 1 % Ot par | a) Columbine. wt +4 Ps KS ae 5. Nectaries 5, Capsules 5, Spec. Cuar. Nectaries equal to the petals; their horns incurved. Leaves and stem smooth. SyN. Aquilegia vulgaris. Linn. Sp. Pl. 752. Huds. j . Fil, An. 235. With. Bot. Arr. 562. Relh, Cant. 207. a one —S Ha CT. a +e ee es | hens 17.96 Piblerhed buft loon x= istinct from any thing he had observed Hence Mr. Westmoretrue Alpine to be quite of British growth. hae us,Flora therefore can properly boast but one species of this %s a) 238 iC ds aay * ry “te, Y yf en or GO “t,226G@ rat ¢ as ™ Tr a) bh 7 r ee "ter ae Ve | ROO, ee Ry i. Ai * 7 * ta Se Nt are sometimes found rather less curved. udson thought he had discovered A. alpina in land ; but on seeing Dr. Smith’s specimens of the Columbine from Mount Cenis, he allowed it a est 4 mountainous situations what the plant loses in luxuriance Ne fit, cas NC PP ., it gains in Meatness and eleganee of foliage, and then the nectaries ea a 's purplish and glaucous. Flowers purple, rarely rose-coloured. “mens invested with a plaited lacerated membrane. %, ranch bearing a solitary drooping flower. Leaves mostly radical, on very long foot-stalks, twice ternate, obtusely lobed, glaucous beneath, smooth; those on the stem nearly sessile, and more simple, the uppermost consisting of 3 entire and acute leaflets. Sometimes the stem bears only such. The stem “sre and colours) i a0 its frequency in . From (of various forms re occurs about dunghills, but is seldom permanent in such places. The root is perennial. Stem not very leafy, branched, each ey7 flowering in June. wx vet) perfectly wild, gardens, it sometimes rs am CO OO eT MO ce LY yn) ee Mans CoLuMBINES in a wild state are found in woods, thickets, and pastures, in several parts of England. They are not rare in Derbyshire and Westmoreland. Mr. Wagstaffe of Norwich Sent us a specimen from that neighbourhood, where, especially about the meadows at St. Faith’s Newton, the plant grows KG oe PY 3 "9 3 7.MTs (°%s, ae a 26 aS f , aa\) : a) 5 < . Sibth. Ox. 169. A. flore simplici. Raii Syn. 273. Bd ; e f ? 6 a . WT Petals ee none. ay Cal. distinct. ms a) ‘ : Car. horn-shaped, alternate with the petals. ENT e haO) Gren. 4 Fa Pentagynia. | POLYANDRIA a ‘ead ro vy. eC s Py ; . aT a0) 7% ’ Common vulgaris. Tee aS OL Ce eC AQUILEGIA ne OF WSpe “tey7S [ mahi ez C7 a ig ~~. | ee Sate 280g i Pa i 3 Oe Me De PM Ce Oo Oe ed Se Ce ae) oe wa a) ee . . e ORE De NN Fa I Sr ae a i es Be ee i “ a Part + - Be re gS ik i en a F Asv '=a eel he ‘a Tt ™ ink Mi ‘ are 7 Mi th i a IC ; tie , » pe le om . P © *, eas‘ sey Pe aa "te, OF ts Sr, c PS ee se oat) oe Oe ae ) Ea Saal AN 5 aur 7aS? fe “4 t ) Oh A bi 5, om 86,9 KG Mo, he} eS The See ag oe So a aot ee, & .”eo ba €, oo Cte eek i oo YvEs fn fi aot . a Vay be] } Te CaO aL Ae ae se PN, Ro Sogn Wh tia iil ee a i Oi Ren Oa Nhe Oe tay the St dS td iF 0 GG 7" A [ 298] a a 9) AY a ad cd cd ate te I hte tae IS ake > Ci ae 3 if SS Pd als 2° oa a i LC & @\ Av a hed) aed ey a sc) ate Mespilus Apii folio sylvestris non spinosa, seu Sorbus torminalis. Rai Syn. 453. %, \ Linn. Sp. Pl. 681. Huds. cae iad] SV Crategus torminalis. Fl. An. 214. With. Bot. Arr. 511. Sibth. Ox. 156. ij SN WS seven-lobed ;_ the lower lobes divaricating. ~ — \\ Leaves somewhat heart-shaped, serrated, eS ee Dek) Pe s ‘3 a Nite » 2 Petals 5. Berry in- >) TE) ae al ead ‘Chih Spec. CHar. Syn. Digynia. CHar. Cal. in 5 segments. ferior, with two seeds. KG ICOSANDRIA Gen. en a iO re TO Ma eg Te ie Oh en Service Tree. Pee Wild torminalis. aC CRATAGUS Oli ie / oy p rhed buy J’ Frverly London. ROE a ie 234 AP pat * s\ Ce oy oe Oe ee + a Che G ar 4 a Afs Pd Lei r) BES bier Ey oe . at sas tts **s, De * eee), Oh PANT 17 96S mens 7 WY . P OL an 0) and forms od lid > tas AS . The fruit of this tree ripens late in autumn, panicles of brown punctated berries, larger than those of the Hawthorn, which, when the frost has touched them, are of an exceedingly pleasant acid flavour, and are sometimes sold in the London fruit-shops. They are esteemed strengthening to thestomach and bowels. Old Tragus, whose figures and their accompaniments sometimes express the virtues of plants with more truth than decorum, gives a ludicrous exhibition of two ittle boys under this kind of Service tree, p- 1010, in order to illustrate its (apparently very powerful) effects in expelling worms, fe wy Nl w we ~ Ot) ms ¥ NY AS ~ 9) mt ny AY ae AS KC © oew es DAS DG 0D: WAS) \\ XY A os Tus tree is most frequent in the north-west and midland counties, though also found here and there in Essex, Suffolk, and Norfolk. We received it wild from Mr. Woodward. _ It is of considerable size, but of slow growth, and the wood is consequently hard. The bark is smooth and ash-coloured. Young branches green and slightly downy, clothed with alternate handsome smooth leaves, of a firm not succulent substance, always more or less accurately 7-lobed, reticulated with small veins, serrated, deciduous. Flowers numerous, in large terminal cymose panicles, appearing early in May; their flowerstalks and calyx downy; petals cream-coloured; styles 3, 4, or 5, and the seeds in proportion, an instance (among many others) how very ill-founded the orders and genera are of Linneus’s Icosandria Digynia, Trigynia, and Pentagynia, as Faller and his disciples long ago contended. y Wibbes . te hr Cie i . midddddd a. Stee a ey eo . ASS hres, eee a Oseerta, ei hs OHArvs7a, eer Osle-2? we > 0 A ‘Ace e ee ats ‘ ee PE aT a e ls Be Cie PL bi tf aT) ‘C aL sty IG gt MT ' cs Ch EY Cie Ae ea NOE aN Ba 7 I) at4 726 ey 6\su7°s POL AAO 3771) wo DKO Co RT Ce rei H.OSKG bad eee Nn Beta Bat ec Pi PRN OKC oe PY) rn AO I, pee lll ae ra) tele ides eee r eee een} eae ee PE n . Pp > Ae as ack Die ash recA Rhee zak Dieses ak isch ties Aik tin eee r)) ne Cn ie Ee hich liinacdi tinea Mia Ss a ‘ SO % 3 Me. ws oF . a Te ——— { NE +} BEALS Qe bd re 0 _ ie ed > es =e Se as og (Oyen? IK ce) Che S' hie bs : ‘Cte Bo. bay a DK” SBG'**, C or SCD ie : Boi ae “te a Ole 5 te ie ae Te See Clie hoeOe Oi ie Oiai Oi Sl ier oct tes oo i is CBs ey ae i ¢ ON terrestris. 0 ie ahead SPHZROCARPUS af “i? Oe ' sec aT a ee nJ sd [ 799.J % CAT = Reticulated Spherocarpus. Dill. Muse. 536. t.'78. f: 17. ¥ botanist, Py 2 is 6,rs s O) } AS Fg Fi ~ & 3 Py iz / x ae 2 . J Py 9 3Py aie “+N bg ® < tt P = hia Sie rhs oie(7x(@. | : a | “Se Be 52 a 4°08, CW eS oa ee) Oe Cea ae eZee we ed ey oe) ee ee) > oe . ots AS ee J a ee ae) ee I IO mal BN e i > ) O = Oa ne OY ee sats 00 er We are n generic character. As to the name, ground of originality, though writers on we retain it on Fungi have ap- genus ; but the sound principles of nomenclature have ate been too much slighted. ov oor PEN r ay « “4y\S v5.5) KG **%, A , 47 ARG) *¢ %, whl on died 2 ry eed a deh it to the genus of Targionia. P ied it to some genus of their own, and Gmelin in his heedless Ompilations has called a plant in Monandria Spherocarpus. tis best never to apply any old name (though laid aside) to a pe e ; : 6 7d and reduced very loth to dissent from our great Cryptogamist, but on Mature deliberation think it safest to retain Micheli’s original genus, the essential character being so very clear, and the habit So totally distinct from the true Targionia (see our t. 287)» Which is of the same natural tribe as Marchantia; whereas ees is closely allied to Blasia in habit, and not far >) rr The whole habit is very delicate and membranous, of a pale glaucous green. Fronds in clusters, nearly horizontal, attached to the ground by short radicles, oblong, waved, their disk covered with tufts of the fructification. Calyx of an inverted pear-shape, like a little bottle or vinegar cruet, erect, pellucid, of a finely reticulated structure; its orifice contracted and a little notched. Seeds forming a globe in the bottom of the calyx, clothed with a fine transparent skin, and, as Micheli observes, ‘not intermixed with any fibres. Mr. Dickson first made this plant known to the English 7, se Pe} but has taken it up on Micheli’s authority. hs ry 2 e 0) minuteness and figure may have occasioned its remaining so long undiscovered, from its resemblance to a small Bryum without fructification. Even Dillenius never found this plant, ss) . he. eed - a an omer ticularly on strong land. A certain glaucous hue distinguishes it at first sight to those who have seen it once, though its a ane) ny Oo n Mi ae at and Y Crowe, pr Bryant, Mr. Mr. Woodward, in clover, turnep, and other fields in Norfolk, covering the earth copiously in the moist winter months, par- *“, by the Rev. Mr. rarer oe Fe ee he St SCs S ef Tir ae TB a Pee OxsrrveD With. *> Bad o _ oar Dicks. Fasc. 1.8. Me Targionia spheerocarpus. Bot. Arr. v. 3. 157. Mich. Gen. 4. 6 oe Bay pe) Pog ae CREDO Spheerocarpus terrestris, minima. t.3. Seeds very LS Va Pea numerous, collected into a globe. Spee, CHARGE (oe Syn. ef! CRYPTOGAMIA Alge. Cal. ventricose, undivided. PE Oba Maths Cie oe RETO Gen. Cuar. nc Die ak Bi KR Lk gets we S PC ak a6 PR Dy ‘ : Ek Dn Eck ; ‘Vt 3 : a SFP ad eh e | RT ed Chee 7 a iv\s tie Bik Bin Ack Ve IC PE y AC ted te ‘ ee ee eee ee 7] ABU) as Pe ik woe ic) ‘4 od Pad oo) / OSE 5 eee SLAC A Diba ay sk Dive Dacsk in as hii cask iat caink ine ccsk line aah dhe caaak die tial Pe : *4 cd Li (oe f ly eT a org - Aw) Cx LVF gg) PS a errr de a oe SPRL ) A ML 3 a5: cc) Nero, > C5 Chiat o te Se Cee ee ei CCR SOE r por hae Soe oP Sree See ces a - - a es — , 2 ’ P \ 7 ‘ : } x , ‘ a @ 47? ee a ry S ae | Oe TRS et tt ca ieee CaS ae ae | 4 HY hii Hite) BT | a P 1 eid le RL eS e oe! 5 7 a a a LICHEN 14 7 inpd PR ba 3 ad) Burgessii. DHS ge eee [ 300] ee DHS 7 at OE C a SC an CL Crowned Lichen, 4 Ne ry . C cs rr) ver OT ee A) 538, : ~ +o see Aa AC) Bi Ooka ek ite seg Cee a OO a aC) ORAL 7 ed POO Che ie) Pe) i Nd PO ry J27'°e ef —— dL hee atid Ake ote i é% _ rT Te “t vyte Che r * Oe, ae With a narrow, scarcely perceptible, border of its own substance and colour, and the whole enclosed in a luxuriant curled leafy elevated margin of the colour and texture of the frond. Mr. Lightfoot describes the shields as, when wet, of the Same colour with the leaves ; whereas they are of a rather brighter brown in that state than when dry. Indeed his whole “scription is not made with all that attention which so new and singular an object deserved. PG et a —-~ when they aré at all tobe found, and the frond protruding with them makes them seem pedunculated, though they are really sessile; their disk is slightly concave, smooth, red brown, ¢ ed Meare Mia Rk Mies shields arise from the disk of the frond, in tolerable plenty | this curious Lichen has been found only in er a Hiruerto Dumfriesshire, Scotland, by the Rev. Dr. Burgess;. but our Specimens were gathered last summer on trunks of trees in the wild and beautiful country about the Devil’s bridge, Cardiganshire, and at Hafod in that neighbourhood, by Dr. Smith. It grows, by no means copiously, in patches about as broad as the hand, the fronds being lobed, sinuated, curled and clustered together, so as to elevate one another into a thick cushion-like tuft; their substance is thin and pellucid, of a dull green, smooth above, finely downy beneath, when dry becoming of The a purplish brown, and the under side whitish or hoary. Pe Mer tah oi rs , %4 a) i Fl, An. ie SARL id , quer Huds. PEN be a “yyiC Lightf. Scot. 827, t. 26. With. Bot. Arr. v. 3. 189. , aii green, leafy, curled and sinuated border. Lichen Burgessii. Linn, Syst. Veg. ed, 13. 807. tah J G x ae hia ree a Bee a Syn. Cuar. Leafy, somewhat imbricated, curled. Shields elevated, brown, slightly concave, with a oy seeds are imbedded. SPEC. ee OES CHar. Male, scattered warts. Female, smooth shields or tubercles, in which the e TF) ry oe es ad 2 TG DKS CRYPTOGAMIA Alga. Gen. — . ee ee i ee Gave ta Lk ae a ee SO Pee! ee PC 0 a we er at "elo tel \9 “Ons eee Ae] OG ed ee: P roy Lik ; are GS4/ by as ba Oe F ee + € Jf? ae ; ri 76. r Rayry s id ee ry bid cr wr ae ’ Oo ae @ ba J CT » f f) } iG . ry . , K J %e ry Oro +4 ¢ . B i) % . ee €) OK yw ry \) ‘ .¢) ad >t PS DEG $ * wr OE 1] a) 4 Ve oAae i am e x/ ‘o mn + osvats i. on pes ex ° Lo f oo f a}Een Tad a ee ‘xe ee ae a as7s al a Saale @ , y ‘Che Ss & 2 Cte, Ed i . é Aas - ba nes p Ve bd « aeeas | J ee eae] aT) ere ca ST ; ‘< a avo ve r ena 6 aoe ' ee Ce af i \3 eres ae DKS, ~— — ¢ RF ee | SE Tel % a 4 y Ceel/FN Uo 4 rs e ded | ’ cr ] Cd hee ry : “Cec/IR\ hy ‘ a 3 co m7 a5 SS, af OL, c i< ZB See Ll a a — - PyDs ‘i ve Ei os = o ¢irwe ak) i. .] Oxle é 7° %en. ° pee Ae . _— . o ea VFL a a ae ey oo PY 2 ch \ oT HAiZ07* at) be " ib ‘ we te Te SO =e) pies hs ~_— ee 4aN9 re Mh Poe oe i a> a rz oe al ssiits: Tt id te Me BS - tie CR , Ald OC Oi is Sie Ot do ve ) Mo oat ad ee a ed a DS ee ah tt ied JI Ae Ot i tr — . . , HIE : 4 a oe c Oe A ew: \ PF aes , . midi iE a aS Oh i. r soi7 é Re 7 ad Pie Ctl we Ee aCe Ca ~atys Pas} tees . ST ul : a, °. 2 tl de) "%, BINS a x] (%9, a aay Gee 18 recommended to be taken internally as well as applied to the wound. As a tonic it may strengthen the general habit of body, and by that means be of use, Some botanists have suspected our Golden-rod to be different from the S. Virgaurea of Linnzeus, but ona careful comparison of specimens we find them precisely the same, e or) EN eS F acy iO wr be POO Ag) aC) ee se Va 3 Oe VE PD 7 Netek Calyx-scales witha membranous border, downy. Rays of the flower from 5 to 9 or 10. Seed-dgwn rough when magnified, The herb bruised smells like wild carrot, It has been esteemed avulnerary, and G varies extremely as to luxuriance and number Bractez lanceolate, downy. ROY which 3 PY 4 Chee PR . . tam y EF °%, ad RY, a rs ? ce% i ee OY ON Oy O ay - a LS ee Root perennial, of long simple fibres. Stem very various in height, from 10 inches to 3 feet, curved below, then erect, leafy, very slightly zigzag, angular and striated, rough, a little downy. Leaves harsh, clothed with short rigid down, paler beneath, on winged footstalks ; the radical ones obovate, or at least very broadly lanceolate, serrated, or rather crenate; those on the stem alternate, narrower and more entire, Flowers yellow, in terminal and axillary erect clusters, forming a dense of flowers, ee, Cn ‘ EE oe In woods, copses, and among furze upon heathy ground not unfrequent, flowering from July to September. panicle, Oe . aii Syn. 176, cnet DO P 1 Ox. 254 ay Sibth. Virga aurea. 6G Sprc. CuHar. Stem slightly zigzag, angular. Flowerclusters panicled, upright, crowded. Syn. Solidago Virgaurea. Linn. Sp. Pl. 1235, Huds. Fl. An. 367. With. Bot. Arr.917. Relh. Cant. 318. 7) SOROS AChE On rE closed, ae Receptacle naked. Down simple. LiGen. Cuar. gulaie florets about 5, Calyx-scales imbricated, | . Seyte ES Obie awaly ir / 5 Chie he is Polygamia-superfiua, ka] SYNGENESIA i | | ( '} yo ot i ‘ 47° me ee 6 Ae J fa ONS | re ae \a) n uC ¢ ed A a | KS ( Golden-rod. te hl oO CRE ORO ek Common Virgaurea. ce ORO SOLIDAGO » a *#) 30) ea ks | | > Me ote ee : Tv?) SD~ i ene oY eu ae NS ree, PT Bie ie TFL. 3 OR ee i oa re ale oe a OSA AS eee RO eS OS S)susee S14 7%8 Tati at OA AC) KG RTs | ers) er ao ee DHS Din Ack Mia A a ee Ra KG a] U Oe “Edel eae aL Wie0 isac eeskne Bika hk wee > cM ie Ces m Peis hee, x Mr ack Bint ak Mine Ack ina heak “Nat #06, DEG *eo.. hte Dacha as A rr OE dinates te r) Chet. i eS eT ae Ee hy Te mi 4 é ih é *,9 Ce ed ee) Gr at" PR, i Or; rr eC “D> Fac rahe "A Fi x ee ne a, » ae coe ta) * *s, OKC Gs. 5 Oetw Cte a is pony es 2. ee a so - ayy t 1} : a) eA Ree iv io ‘ 2 ee 5% e ed > A ed Ne | See, ie, bar eae F skh, *a, dy nd <n eyy7 o,./ ie _ | me, Pats 4 is ; led tae > hat Boxy.ad te ia % a2bed Ay. Ce ai | i 4 ti CAMPANULA latifolia, 5 Bell-flower. a MIE mae Monogynia, ™ of 3) C. maxima foliis latissimis. Cant, Raii Syn, 276. re 2g 6 a — Fa oa it al va a5 Onat e CB) rs % iT) 7. a % “3 oT! C be] P bosoms of the Rees Calyx smooth, serrated. Corolla large and handsome. The PIE aa on at) Wer ee a a rae) °b, he Veo RIC er oS Ps fi, " a ~ Ch Re te 0 Core. | Nad antheree are not large, but afford plenty of pollen, which copiously adheres to the style. ; rhis is sometimes cultivated in gardens. It flowers in August, nang ornamental ; occasionally varying to white or pale 4 ad ae aesiC the © From bd serrated, 6 doubly upper ones arise solitary naked flower-stalks, scarcely ever bearing more than one flower; we have not found the pair of « leaf-scales,” or rather bracteze, mentioned in the Bot. Arr, AP Leaves alternate, nearly sessile, large, roughish, 7 beneath, RS line paler ee gular, leafy, KC u ve Root perennial, very milky as well as the whole herb, Stem 3 or 4 feet high, erect, simple, cylindrical or very slightly an- a eS near Dunstable, where it was first remarked and ascertained by our obliging correspondent the Rev. Mr, Abbot, for many botanists overlook this plant for C. Trachelium. od In the north of England, and in Scotland according to Mr, Lightfoot, this species of Campanula is not unfrequent, though rare inthe southern counties, It grows in shady moist places, about the bases of mountains. Mr. Rose observed it in Forehoe wood near Kimberley, Norfolk. Our wild specimen grew le oO OY cL NY ees 6 Huds, ee / 3 Relh. ate Sle od a) Zinn. Sp. Pl. 233, With. Bot. Arr. 218. Lightf. Scot. 141. a Campanula latifolia, Fi: An. 96. Suppl. 2,10. (°%, a as Syn. unStem Leaves oyato-lanceolate. CuHar. Flowers solitary, pedunculated. branched, round. Fruit drooping, EN Spec. MS Oe Gen. CuHar. Cor. bell-shaped, closed at the bottom Stigma 3-clelt. by valves bearing the stamina. Caps. inferior, opening by lateral pores. a + PENTANDRIA Fas reece Ay Ir} pa ee S. RL Giant . ws H4G"**e, Pe 1 hte * rh ca - @\327"* a are \ | | sd ye Oh OL ee ORL Rig ee, . oy ca Sout Bia| 9g 4 k - ante , Stee Oe ee bed i Oe DS > ets oC nce > Wr ee SC) ee elt ; “nels a “Mensano “Oa. ee \ © “ss, > oh des ce aS) on 3 C 2s Ny t A as Cte ea 1 s NE sD I pe ae a ric a ia ba PR AIO ee are 5 OMZ/S46, a , Gre Cra a] oteg, a 9 SL His Le 5 Bars 5 Dk ions ‘ aah Jey es Co 7N I Onn Lad liek ied ee Tee a) '% a m0) = oe de td kt Ok Oe, i kh ais ies tks aie OE ee , A Ta nt Aa es vs ee A td ie Oe 4 e Dae ok ites nk Mastak xi Ct a RE is i n Aa os ee * 3 Clbet ee Oe G6 85 DKS "te C Pekok tes Chia Die att iis iat “9 i, ony a) — ie ) c bdal " ei aa BS i @n/ ae a Ed iS ee ee ee: ~5OR = Oia aS eV ° ei Ne ee Ra ee > fi cad = » Bay ite a be baat ad a Sete ha oe ~» ey ee = 6 af Seer by | aly aes p°e, , heba ne %. 9G a 2 bal Vind - pe m : a ? om aS < te. », Mele i %e,,'%) =F tag J ne| LF ce @) e729, pag S05 - 2, * Pe - "4 Chiepus PLa o aii 4] i) al seed LAA ate HE ah e LO al teas a) tJ ce Bec &¥ * Beer i Tand, ie [ 303] 75¢ aO) 5, BE ot ce CL ACER Pseudo-Platanus. Greater Maple, or Sycamore. ao at TO re OTae re , ~ from the sap, which is more remarkably the case with the Acer saccharinum of America. Buds The bark is smooth, ash-coloured, Branches round. d, the Opposite, formed of numerous scales. Leaves 5-lobe x terminal ros Fi PY lobe largest, all veined strongly, and unequally ser- y, long, drooprated. Stipulz none. Clusters solitary, axillar ng. Petals droopi s Flower red, flowe manyand ed branch ing, colour. green, very like the calyx-segments in size, form, and pendent, Germen very hairy, Stigma cloven, revolute, Fruit 7 UF 6, Py Py smooth; seed-wings often 3, not much divaricated, in August, the flowers appearing in May, o It ripens es if We have great reason to suspect there are two varieti not distinct species of this tree, in one of which the leaves are fila~ glaucous beneath and their serratures very distant; the Our intelligent friend Andrew Cald~ s this are hairy. mentof et of Dublin, first suggested the idea of this difference, My and the Linnean herbarium confirms his suspicions Fd a0) >] Ps i Pa ree 200 + <{ HS S\sl2e2%e,. See. f" BIC) Ne a Ara) ee ak | Os) PLY od On * ES G*%s .sayrce ie rt ss roee a ee that he putrefy, and * contaminate and mar our walks,” so The would “banish it from all curious gardens and avenues.” used for wood, as in all trees of rapid growth, is soft, chiefly ed ordinary utensils. Dr, Withering says sugar may be obtain re about houses leaves fall early, "te the Pi) planted 9G that AL much though Evelyn complains 5G very handsome, quick growing trec, grass, it was A a3 Ces formerly, to i ies Being a large, not injurious vy C one. 2 © about ef? &c, bd in hedges, this tree, so common thinks not observed houses, is not really a native of Britain. We have It is said to prefer a maritime it in any very wild places. mountamous situation and exposure, but will grow even in a and Ray ic +. Pa) a ied Ty yo Car ¢ ae) s2e%%e,, 7) iG 127, —— oe Te me aG Ox. Rai Syn. 470. ned Sibth. 380. ee Cant. A. majus. we 4 e ~y LS ry 8. Male. Cal, 5-cleft. Pet. 5. Stam. y serrated, Spzc. Cuar, Leaves five-lobed, unequall Flowers in pendent clusters. Pl. 1495. Huds. Syn, Acer Pseudo-Platanus. Linn. Sp. Reth. 1147, Arr, Bot. With. Fl. An, 445. € or 3, single. Stamina 8. Pistillum 1. Capsules"2 wing, a seeded, terminating in rig Petals 5. Cal. 5-cleft. 7 CJ Cuan: Monoecia. ta Hermaphr. art Gen. POLYGAMIA ep i ae et ts ee ee ae) rT. 0) eees Ciece ee eC) “ ws Or a ee Oa KG Le a Pe "anf 7 e/a a Ps NOOR Re Mae ik Beikit Binal er FR ls ee ay ar Retpnee= aie Di a Rina Mh nr i a eee aia eil PT oT . Oe a eS a E SO ee 7 a6 i Oi ; eo DG OKC" %s, a Gs aii cece . Minna a Bi had4 Oa ne Bier a acs she Sd Ci jhe Nl rN ticd dStt Ot” es oo Oe a ts Wiad ih J “a ce i ty | la Hil is RS RM ee pares re] ra tele? : ee AN AN ee PE7 TO id es Ps : and a [ 304] ACER a Flowers green, PAL rye) GI a extremely divaricated 3 wings smooth. e Fe tg *%, om ae i ? s “3g Their an- Capsules downy, or) The wood is very useful for turners, being compact, of a fine grain, and often beautifully veined. The antient Romans rn are said to have set an exhorbitant value upon their tables of according to their size and the beauty of their See Evelyn’s Sylva. as. aC) t2p°%@, Po ed NS X J De 3 os «? °¢ % s ONY FI Ss ia Rs, igs fix rs ‘Che Abe) & S a Re G*s, at, 5 vd vans. ere $s ae much like those of the preceding. there (as in that) are hairy between the lobes. maple-wood, ral na eA Clusters of he Pa ee) Stipulz none. ~~ lobe having one or two notches. flowers appearing in May or June, erect, terminal, branched. ets ar “6 ee we he eee Footstalks downy as well as the leaves, which are smaller than in most of our trees; opposite , 5-lobed, each wd od rv oy +4, DIS corky fissures. hedges and thickets in the southern counties, found ’in the northern ones or in Scotland. tree, with spreading divaricated round opposite bark smooth, though that of the stem is full of ¥ a, N OT rare in though seldom It is a small branches, their vs Raii Syn. 470. ng Chee A ° A. minus. es - : os = hd ee i. 3) 27° , ra od | Acer campestre. Linn. Sp. Pl. 1497. Huds. Fi. An. 445. With. Bot. Arr.1148. Reth. Cant. 380. Stbth. Ox. 1277. 0 Ne ek om notched. n HPSS SN obtuse, -@ A ¥cv ee Syn. Cuar. Lobes of the leaves Flowers in upright clusters. oie i CRN eS aaa ; Spec. 654% a a Monecia. Gen. Cuar. Hermaphr. Cal. 5-cleft. Pet. 5. Stam. 8. Pist.1. Caps. 2 of 3, single-seeded, terminatin g in a wing. Male. Cal. 5.cleft. Pet. 5. Stam. 8, wKG POLYGAMIA *j Es we sane ey mC Santi Oa ER PYi a0 - av. campestre. Common Maple. <7. eS i ee ea ee ee = aT ENG) hee ss Cy a an t ae Ps oN . a e a — a A Nite ak Be Bi Pc a ie KROL RL ACOR aL BOOKS Chie A) 2 a 3 pepe7 Pee ¢ my a er ed) - ee 7 : t Pee eS Phe skeen ihieites Minne Fay I | ie oxlinen DO 40x ra C sh Lao , VP ae de ma eddie |eeei S\ye 4% 7% t Vout 7s tase td ee v7 7 a 7 Tr) ae)' wel f) | S4./78oy ry! eL . a a | ® 3 a) : wy 2 7 Lao D324 ae Ds ah Dh chk hee Pack Met as Aiea . “Le A 7? Rint a TAsRie iklet Mie *e, ° 7A ' : ca WP aleRe iP ne Binet Fa as ST *an SH ee de i es FF> Pe et rd 5 28 Ek. te SS ow B+ ae ee Bs 20 ra ‘S, ., ’ T6% tied DS Ate > Otis ra 7 » 7 Se DHS DRO 0D liberties DONT’ eps me . ip eee. ua’ NY Mia ie et UA alk ie i E co % , 4 ad NA b J | " a c an a be y . : LF fits ( Gr Ph A, aan ar & ) , SO ad bs th. “ | : Ripe S le Po Mid F< e i kia Pi! SC pit Cte Ge, zQe 3 AN | @ 79 RG 7 Re ) fi SN | t, 28. f. . S} rd 105. Ld . yA ray 2289 aC) \AP2 ryae os 4 7 CE ah) Chih YO Cie) » iG a ECR. . Dill. Musc. 206. Ww I * lobed, their extremities dilated, bearing the shields on their under side completely concealed from view till the plant is dried up by any means, and then those shield-bearing lobes are en oe S CT teflexed. The disk of the shield is roundish, irregular in shape and various in size, concave, tawny or brick-coloured; they become darker in drying, though the colour of the frond is 5 Se.7 aC) AL BE cue: scarcely changed. het eo Clk ty 7 ate WOE Cae ee 2. caninus, &c. justifies its being placed in that section. They are brown, smooth, somewhat imbricated, horizontal, obtusely Re in moist and shady parts. The fronds are scarcely coriaceous, only its affinity with bea Scotland, se D I woods, clinging close to the mossy stems and roots of trees, and also on rocks, in the mountainous parts of Great Britain. Dillenius found it growing upon pebbles on the Sussex coast, and Dr. Smith on the rock of Dumbarton Castle, Acne ACRE ui : Fae ae a al aed Pt a al | 06 N\A Webel Pr Raii Syn. 77. L. fuscum, peltis posticis ferrugineis. i MMMM A kad ey Rt i) superficie locatis. Pe ? ho Lichenoides saxatile fuscum, peltis in aversa foliorum E 9 NEP v. 3. 205. to s te Ook ae a ie 4 ot) ea Le ke Gen. Cars Male, scattered warts. Female, smooth shields or tubercles, in which the seeds are imbedded. Spec. CHar. Cotiaceous, creeping, lobed, brown. Shields marginal, on the under side of the frond. Syn. Lichen resupinatus. Linn. Sp. Pl. 1615. Huds. Fl. An. 545. Lightf. Scot. 848. With. Bot. Arr. zg we tb weer CRYPTOGAMIA Alge. & ry 4 Cie e ) oO neat se Ne per Po et Ls RE ater ee, Reversed Lichen. i i resupinatus. bed s re me Sv) LICHEN ‘ b Lg > x al eS F owe, ro Rte : Pad yy ae race es CPt, ‘ ER a a RY Se ie hid | | \s ESel re a) Sr aes a) ) Sel Ay : “tee FIN (9 . 1 a ana a we Re CO) | | a PEC DRG ee aC ee te sk Cha G" “tae ACL ACs Meee DC kt Onur MeO AG hs i 0 Do a Ch ee Als PG. rs ed aL Gl Ok Me Bihan eeeK eadeedAO Ee ee) Te E Ce ye i] ba AAC he vs ae * Ur a Ci ees RL pk Mie tas On eee re oe ie ae ene ee ats ais Ce) RY, a » ee am Sag Mrs Efe ee ed te, 5) oat i eo 7 aT ore BA Rit aad Me ket ak Bina aad tease o> a aA ~ 5 cabz we fe &S a’ — Ahi XY a ee ae) ee wa ihe ee, a ees ay Yah raree nal bid Bilddddd ES € ~ did < ¥ , > .) DRO SEG e EG AY why Ae ee MSc we ial eat, Ae ba , “SC; st “SKS -*e Pe, OS PO et 5 NTR MONCECIA ee Cer. KK @,, ©) 5% ; ‘e =) Ney. (. *8 . Loree Mer SC or) KG 4 be Pe o C) re 42) Triandria. C. leporina. Huds. Fl. An. 404. With. Bot.Arr.1029. Relh. Cant. Suppl.1.15. Sibth. Ox. 27. Gramen cyperoides, spica e pluribus spicis mollibus compositas aii Syn. 422. ri Eee aC Bhar I Gen. CHAr. Male, Cathkin imbricated. Cal. of one scale. Cor: none. Female, Cathkin imbricated. Cal. of one scale. Cor. inflated, permanent. Seed triangular, invested with the corolla. : Spec. CuHar. Spikelets about six, oval, close together, alternate. Scales lanceolate, equal to the capsule. Syn. Carex ovalis. Gooden. Tr. of Linn. Soc. v. 2. 148. :a p BS7 Or LOT a EO erect, Rederatet tte ere hae ragraph of the description of Carex Pseudo-Cyperus, t. 242. We have expressed ourselves as if Dr. Goodenough had called the corolla a capsule, in opposition to Linnzus; whereas the Te nti ON) od V ( i! fi 5 °* or Oa teL Cte € ie : TNs TS SY oT CO truth is, Linnzeus carelessly uses nectarium and capsula indifieTently for the same part, and our excellent friend, to whose labours in this genus the British botanist is so much indebted, takes the latter term merely as the least exceptionable. The part in question however is totally distinct from the germen and fruit, merely enveloping the seed, and is really a permanent corolla. OF ae] i) +) aN Fee Or VP) terminal, AF spike oN General a a0 3 *t,5. species. ay, other composed of 5 or 6 upright oval spikelets, the largest of which is terminal. Bractez solitary, lanceolate, at the base of each spikelet, the lowermost longer than the rest, and ending in a leafy point. In each little spike a few of the lower flowers are male, the rest female. Scales ovato-lanceolate, acute, equal to the corolla. Filaments longer than the scales. Style tumid at the base. Stigmas but two. Permanent corolla slightly notched, convex on one side, margin rough. We beg leave to correct an inaccuracy in the concluding pa- Co than in most ASaa "4 , 7) Jf Ly jf A a | Ei Caer /. Cee ad i ee Mie 7 LY A OL J EM hae) 5 ia << Me did a Ks MM CUE MID yf ‘ Ss = f x GATHERED in Kensington Gardens, flowering in June. Ft is very Common in wet marshy pastures. _ Root perennial, creeping? Stem, erect, hollow, about a foot high, with 3 sharp rough angles. Leaves sheathing the lower part of the stem, and rising about equal to it in height, dark green, narrow, roughish on the edges and nerve, but less so be, —_— — G es ? CAREX oyvalis. Oval-spiked, or Naked Carex. o ee at, f 306J a aA ree eee F Gi ne ee ree & eae a) Res Y Paid a oy Se bs Ksae CF DR MOE as be id ,2¢ Pak! a Vals . rey re i aC) We oC Beote al oN a) A ta el] S oe La a PS es dh tS : hed DS Cia Ms he ar en Cth ae ey a 4 y a ai) ‘in bE ae | SS ORFee a et i iS Oe oo ad he mR aU e 4 *% J e ie 6) wee Tah . oe La aksia a. %,, DK Ce Or a6 a a ars Che %e., re a6 AE Pao! eh hr TP UJ Che aL eS “Ge a ts, 5 7a ) a? ee ° ,5) , Pl Mans a ak MAA MOL A Di aK Bink Ma MRA OR ca Ba nd C J = “Sie. Oe OL Ce OE Bin tok A Phar ikMet Mae a he ee, CB SO) ek ners’ Meas Ca cack Bier ak Ries askMeal Bin ei aa ae pe ; Fe 5 isk Miartech ae AAS < Oe Tl ie Sk *ay eS ee e id ibid Milddd a) ars DE cha oi j, f F 2 OPES eA Me : DMG be PS CS ibe F Oat Mild Ota id POR ihe has , Ck P les ape te i ES Aaa _ ed Sp cs Che <) i pe oe ae Se a Soe ; ‘ ’ pee #) ‘ F aoe , “> oy ile, eed ey Te Pe ae ¥ a , . fo, mg. %, PP Te Ae Seevy FAN a is 8 G 2 E Great ?> a7 age vulpina. Carex. ae OL Cid ce eg: e Ts FSGS CAREX = a) ] aC Fig 307 3) SoLP Fgh Bs ITE: ETA (Eo 7, LYELL ZL C24 a FEZ LES Z LEH oes x cS iz Py al ‘ Ps re Seen) ck rai) a ei Ts re Lav wee a ry PY Triandria. base, long, deep green, very rough on the edges and nerve. General spike of several alternate, rather remote, compound OT CS spikelets, with a linear bractea to each. Little spikelets small, their male flowers above the female. Scales of the male flowers Ovate, acute, membranous ; those of the female somewhat ab- Oey oY Tupt, with a longish HI tal } | | z os 1s . | Y 8 \ an Ai 4 | / Hi x | sit ’ point. Base of the style tumid. eI 79 an) oF) nal ed,or aC 7 a WLP Chie Pe Oo! AC ie Cred ee Bie - ed Pe at ‘ts o ae ©209 be Uy Py IB ‘Ohi ee r Te OY a’ 6 | ; ms \yh rough Stigmas two. Permanent corolla slightly notched. The stem above the lowest spikelet, as Dr. Goodenough observes, suddenly diminishes very much in thickness. Leers’s exquisite figures cannot be too much admired, though perhaps he excels less in some of the Carices than in other grasses. We mean only to commend his own original plates. Those of the 2d edition are vile copies, in which all accuracy of character is lost, and even many parts totally omitted by the undering5 eneray eneraverer. rat) Stems many, shece CZ Root perennial, fibrous, forming thick tufts. erect, about 2 feet high, stout, very acutely triangular and rough, So as to cut the fingers of those who handle them incautiously. Leaves sheathing the lower part with their whitish membranous -rf and is one of the largest as well as best understood British species. It flowers in the early part of summer, but its brown spikes in a seeding state may be found for some time afterwards. Pd is found, rather less frequently than the last, in marshy places, banks of rivers, &c. AL rs Oe Tus ’ ®\su-r Ss tN hae . oy ST Sans nee I OO Chee a Ot spica compacta. 24°6 Gramen cyperoides palustre majus, Rati Syn. 423. oO **9,.9) i) Stbth. Ox. 27. Gooden. Tr. of Linn. Soc. v. 2.161. Leers Herborn. 196. t. 14. f. 5. ‘5 i An. 404. With. Bot. Arr. 1080. Relh. Cant. 350. ' 2 Oy ae a 7 i Le 7rns f Fj S * . SoS ae. | Ter Gen. CHar. Male, Cathkin imbricated. Cal. of one scale. Cor. none. Female, Cathkin imbricated. Cal. of one scale. Cor. inflated, permanent. Seed triangular, invested with the corolla. Spec. CHar. Spike thrice compounded, compact, obtuse. Male flowers in each spikelet above the female. Fruit spreading. Angles of the stem very sharp. Syn. Carex vulpina. Linn. Sp. Pl. 1382. Huds. Fi. Ste, MONCECIA yPy . bia Aud | ee a Tr ree i ke A oan ac i ie eo Oe FINe “te, Jaa oes > * = ie hd = FSC) ree) wer . See rex ie) . ie 7 EUS ee ea cs AAG, diam we cr) Re a Bee oie Os! Ce O96" a ea eo OS OTs: 1c ORG” RO) SOT Rr er RCN a et 6.5 “YS crue: aoe MET “Bane 7 te Tae mC aaa Rm eK Minchin SDita aK ere RES cee ee ON OCRenc) aCe geese = i ere ee KG ea a at) a ee OY eea ek ee TO s *..9 6°85, oe5K to. HKG v7 0 95K Chee oes eee cok tee | 8 Rar he IP TaN AINE oo Sarge aa omar Det ak Mie 5 tht cack Matsa A het cack Bart ak Bins caa Mant cook art cei tae ie | oS ee Pe er i ee ee Oe ae) or eee . eae Sd a ee Oe 7s ew Che eee oa 7 ee) Avs Re ee, ASee) oe Y= Poy.) ha TS a Be idl aa dk a : lee) A ea Ai $M er . 6 % ani . oe Nae 6 © < ‘Cha vO ES Tea! 5 Cie Pe) *e, By i) a Ste a ‘cies i a uf s -s* SS ; ou is ’ 4 ie DOR id ee tS pa ptt thd bc Ota me 5 Ile et a, - tS Cie : 9 Ske F oe .., edie do eu he eon IAG t rr “Ps. , F r fee ‘ vty he ON id A ee ‘ ee . 14% Gn : , wincrafisd " Jac re adeean ’ ns Se baht lr ia: : Ci ee a ahy, ad 2 . *06,..996 ne yy a y Pee autumnalis. PO 7G ah HG OL a 7 F see ADONIS 4 jl SF ed ». Corn Adonis, or Pheasant’s-eye. DSKG ef e 5 a bl a ieee aT mJ p SN ‘ ~ Are +h) ee i wide ets a xie aa nema a oo ae eer Fr ee ee - < yN . ‘ \ a 7 \ < i Trae A) G4’ OL EF aa 7) 6 o/ a PPOa aC aa ase | vice Sa , a F OR a wild specimen of this elegant plant we are obliged Miss Lysons, who gathered it in Gloucestershire in Octoberto last. It grows, though rarely, in corn-fields. Mrs. Plestow, of Watlington, in N orfolk, observed it near Denver sluice in that a) dt ete —— eget ad ag ee And Curt. Lond. fasc. 3. t. 37. Flos Adonis. Raii Syn. 251. wm : aS % ¥ Adonis autumnalis. Zinn. pis Fs, OTe Pde Fl, An. 239. With. Bot. Arr.570. Sibth. Ox. 171. at SYN. VF ded Te Wee) mo 7 iC) er ‘ 0 DES, ese 3 * AEs 2ote@ 30) I ie i be ele bh ae Ce i, ee sel hs Chike | Oe eds , os 7 avy mr) Ee risiC 9 aT5 oh oJ te peg >) A "ay ~ ar a an ie Nee Pe, |3) Prat) ° ad id a IHG 2, D3 £ . “’ Aw ay oe She 6 ar bal | yer Td a ¢ te ee, PN Oi ae versely heart-shaped, concave, the fruit rather ovate, and not aalf so long. It is certainly an error in Linnzus to call the Pit of 4. cestinalis ovate, and this subcylindrical. The contrary is rather the case; at least the former is truly cylindric al, and very long and slender compared with ours. 5 AP OR Ce OL Linneus formerly did. In that the petals are obovate and narTow, the fruit long and cylindrical ; in ours the petals are in- SS = 8 By hee Pr, J 3 ant flower. This species is however distinct enough from the pale-scarlet 4. estivalis of the south of Europe, with which Haller in his description, No. 1158, seems to confound it, at ve. | & en 9) Root small, annual. Stem much branched, upright, leafy, round, striated. Leaves alternate, thrice compound, the segments linear, alternate, acute. Flowers solitary, terminating the branches, inodorous, of a beautiful polished crimson, each petal marked with deep purple at the base, and the stamina, antherse and styles being of the same dark colour, give a great brightness to the red part. Calyx pale green, somewhat membranous, soon falling off. Petals about 8,. rarely more, often fewer, for Linnzeus in a manuscript note in his own Species Plantarum confesses he took the character there from a luxuri- Jr aC ied a Ys ao ad edtak county. - DKS POLYANDRIA Polygynia. Grn. Cuar. Cal. 5-leaved. Petals 5 or more, witho ut Seeds naked. anectary. Spec. CHAar. Petals about eight, obcordate, concave. Fruit ovate. 3, @\4% ee 4% va eC te hd rrr aa AV (e rer pS Fe]c a 3 oi Ee , ee a §a/7>\9 : a 5 Ts i cot. PPX Wie i . = eeOa is =e ly HO a ee mF co i) as : re PEG YeeSEA = WY Poet | DEG . rT. wires | a DS Oy DEG Ce PLaatOh nLra aCe TPL ICR DMG s Pr OH ee,Che he DHS RT , y 5 a Chee PRE, Val Re nee ORS ORC rr ht Bibbs ddd j AE \ i oD v Ter PL Cite POE ee EV “Sed rtd te DG kad Crd er 0D ype Cae DHS MeO Ares| LHC oe Se ORC TKS He DHS ee DHS DHS MDH e478 ee Ctl oO itt DES DRE pelea haiee canteen | oy Por OSEle ND: P a * y= aD) af es A i Sk . ic : S_-/ Fe ~ ee ae) Pee See 220 ave eee : Clay Cie tylies ee Cee ee Se 0 CeesEeeca “ OE ae,CCRC Sa - 7°; re ~ Tepe CeSA earn al Peo \! bulbifera. ee aC) 2a Coral-wort. AOE Bulbiferous ‘ rT DENTARIA ) Siliquosa. ees 4 POE as Sa @ G Pash) 7 eV a Ts "Mg ASG “Pre 4 Va} cS ecmenrerunemmmaan CeOT i ae Gen. Cuar. Pod bursting elastically, the valves rolling back. Stigma notched. Calyx-leaves connected longitudinally. Spec. CHar. Lower leaves pinnated; the uppermost simple. Syn. Dentaria bulbifera. Zinn. Sp. Pl.912. Huds. Fl. An. 285. With. Bot. Arr. 683. CTT large and handsome, appearing early in May. slightly notched. The stigma 1s asa) we > ye ~a ead FB & oe Cee RO Gy f, Ate . Ch ~ a $) "4 T0) Pol ee A LJ hee S a a FAP od ry “7 es ». *e a , ee 9 ‘he is Obey & 5 Ose G —— es, PL roundish, ; ra 2/f°0 my ee DY a hes o ‘ Ne a) ee and set with alternate tooth-like protuberances, which gave occasion to the generic name. Stem from the terminal bud of the last year, erect, round, simple, 18 to 24 inches high, leafy . in the middle and upper part. Leaves alternate; the 2 or 3 lowermost pinnate, of 5 leaflets, some above them of 3, and the upper ones simple, gradually lessening; leaflets all lanceolate, very irregularly and partially serrated, smooth, rather succulent. In the bosom of most of the leaves stands a solitary, oval, scaly, dark purple bud or bulb, which.falling off vegetates in the ground, and thus the. plant is copiously propagated, like the Lilium bulbiferum; consequently its seeds are scarcely ever perfected, as happens to plants that increase much by root. The flowers are in a terminal corymbus, lilac-coloured, 3 as Sas) fleshy, 5) * ¢ ad creeping horizontally, white, oS SS = a The root is perennial, » . a pt ee M/A ee Ge a) rato re eS OT ~ an ome 1 Otis P 2 A ln CV . Ca RTE eee) CET SO ee ie er Oe OL iL MACCH > a td ; Bo a eT eee Turis rare plant grows wild in some few parts of England, in shady places, especially at Harefield, in a grove now belonging to William Baynes, Esq. and in some parts of Buckinghamshire not far from thenee. Our specimen was obligingly communicated by the Rev. Dr. Goodenough from his garden at Ealing, where the Dentaria is perfectly naturalized, and preserves its original wild appearance. 6 '*4,9 pega en BR pen ass TETRADYNAMIA oe pee ——————— eg a ies oe SY si a a “2 Oq) | See Sonor AY CRY See ae ay ee a Uk i hI Cte OL ae . AO Orno Ch es Ma Maal ec I , Ce ACM Rie ROL) 1S A Oe et ld oeRS Oetke PO) Ch Cae ORT : - Ni A Ni Nath Rat al Mane cA Recs Rare Deter Mee ddd sd BM eR Re Ale as LS Cg PE ie ra tL Ton hte BOL LORRY ,_ Ca acter amor MOY eae RO RAL MOY Sens DE ‘ ev we, ‘ "6 Hi A fs A é dot Ay 7 ae "@e/' Te ew, fos ee & “3, nae wr wee) wean Ga, es y .) a ¥s 2 ate en oy “ eee i aC a Bskereny a 6) ba PPBab iia era,Wag Se 4 hs Cll Varin}. foe eer ne ii Po SS Cte ed x So tine " ay ESN BaEe ot td) S| SSG 5 e at ST i)a re weAN Eee yee %e 8 ee SeA Sled a e Neng — he eS — Be. ©) xt 7's, bdS\ Se iL Seca ' ht Tas . , Hinie Bt +] } Z's Hy | | oa | eee y a ae roe “So. ae ey) % | ty 7 o co Che ws Pei CORNUS 3 Suecieca. hha TOL fo ME AC Yr ee 75% Pe’ t Monogynia. Gen. Cuar. Cal. of 4 teeth. Petals 4. Drupa inferior. Spec. CHAR. Herbaceous. Flower between two branches. ry we 4 $40) a) CRO Ee TETRANDRIA eel 10 ao Dwarf Cornel. ee Te Syn. Cornus Suecica. Arr. 161. Linn. Sp. Pl.171. eo ET ry ©) Abad Nut of 2 cells. With. Bot. eee Pe C. herbacea. Huds. Fl. An. 71. Chamepericlymenum. aii Syn. 261. eM > ey — 7 ‘Chas! 2 . a ie me ra) Ne eer pe@ at, *¥. ow raat) r@ x EF ng) as) >) SF er a ~ eis co) i. LAC) i -) 6 2 ae) i>) m ts ce <8 rae iP 8, . ey At Oe hae 2) bd The fruit is round, red, sweetish. On each side the stalk that supports the umbel arises the rudiment of a branch, which overtops the fruit before it arrives at maturity. The presence of these branches distinguishes this species from Cornus canadensis. tO ee aS it so, having perhaps not seen it alive. . Each flower stands on a short partial stalk, and is in A Va ripens. every part, except the stamina, of an exceedingly deep purple, almost black. Stamina and anthere whitish. The umbel might easily be taken, by a casual observer, for one simple flower with 4 white petals, and we are afraid Ray understood ee ee Ce eee called the Hole of Horcum, where this alpine plant grows abundantly, as well as about the Cheviot hills, Northumberland, and in the Highlands of Scotland, flowering in June and July. It is nearly allied to a favourite American plant, C. canadensis, but does not thrive so well in a garden. Root perennial, creeping, long and slender. Stems perfectly herbaceous, erect, rising to the height of 3 or 4 inches, square, leafy. Leaves opposite, sessile, ovate, entire, strongly ribbed, without stipule. Flowers in a little terminal pedunculated umbel, with a large involucrum of 4 ovate unequal white leaves, often bordered with red, and turning green as the fruit ye hl, ate -~ ECan } f | ‘s Mr. wituram Travis of Scarborough gathered the specimen here figured on the side of avalley in that neighbourhood. ro pl A eet ———— a EA ie RAN <a GOarer20g, oriv pda oe Sits i STs ee ae das a Q\Mere, OOS wer oe ae ee = wae 7 = bate’ bah “Sad Foe ce5 a)PaaSaC ita ak ae >JK ‘ce? bredOE7t ee ep CaM fa OG” eS DAEG “Fe, sishelionan Min oC ha A Pe aee s Ae PIry Ete Ree, Aaa Bint an 7 Ott. ba 3POL? Pee Ca ae Poe Rita ; (5ORngee oo ifie 4 4 i Hd ddd gee RT Wr G * Lae A Iain Ai Bihhet Daa sh Se DKS Ae OIC es a ¢ ws? a6 7 PE are "DK v) GP, MES aL 8 a) c J *e : |Ork Mi te, ver) 3 Ee 6, 93K. 48 = ph Ta noe Miancaisk i PRD Do ote, D5 DHS Me ek ie hk y Ome her aC oC Ps 4 f 5 2 ay i a Sa4 oe ee ed 4 Pr ee & o/s %,. Sa so 4 7 - J Ck “a +O . ee te eet eC A Fe ee a) eo. rape \ = + - a ca ®o t S Poo” be ‘ew. ie a ee Pepe San iad i Pd Si = . set: a tla Ped Did oe oe a hes Pee 5 eine tke bi On - ™ ee . ad > ie td e+e - *, cos oe eS bad yim ep ogc a rr) a PS “ye i eee A ERIOPHORUM a ty, J iC Poet acd So. a “4 a a alpinum. Alpine Cotton-grass. Gy Pj x 6 leafy point. ae os Seed clothed Po @ 3 13 6 7) not taste and admirers of Nature, but who are as inadequate judges of their own-talents, as of the universal elegance and wisdom 4 > of the creation around them. we Pat Ss ov 99 Cie Ost ees su Cie Pe aC ed nee) Py R oe ca er Hav Last tee APP fi ro 5 ¢ Pa A tear) with long, owt » ed ray ry sharply triangular, very numerous hairs, which originate from its base, and rise much above the top of the style. Their extreme whiteness and their delicate texture give an elegant appearance to the plant, though it boasts none of those gaudy colours requisite to excite the attention of many, who really fancy themselves persons of Pd 12 be TO Leaves few, linear, rough on rad oe sand, with many fibrous radicles. the edges, obtuse, sheathing at the base, erect, sometimes 3 or 4 together on a barren branch. Stems several, erect, much taller than the leaves, close together, with 3 and sometimes 4 rough angles, striated, their base enveloped in one or more short sheathing leaves, and a few tubular, membranous, bluntly acuminated scales, seeming like the rudiments of leaves. Spike solitary, terminal, erect, oval, small, of several ovate, yellowish brown, sharply keeled scales, the lowermost tipped with a ~~ J | o me iM " erro 3 ory a iG iy IRST discovered in Britain by Mr. Brown and Mr, George Don, in a turfy bog 3 miles east of Forfar, in the shire of Angus, Scotland. We are obliged for wild specimens to Mr, John Mackay of Edinburgh, a most diligent and skilful investigator of the vegetable kingdom, by whose communications we have often been enriched. It grows in alpine situations, flowering about July, and has hitherto been announced as a native of our island, in the 2d volume of the Linnean Society’s Transactions only. Root perennial, creeping horizontally among bog-earth and ede) PON es AC) eT AC! ——— ©) 4, 228 (Chee Te — Pe cnet Scheuchz. Prod. 27. t. 8. we sf°6 uy € Per Flo. TN 3 ~ ti) Se) a Linn. Sp. Pl. 77. > BOR fi. ? P Eriophorum alpinum. Lapp. ed. 2.20. Trans. of Linn. Soc. v. 2. 290 & 356. #1. Dan. t. 620. Dicks. Hort. Sicc. Fasc. 8.3. Juncus alpinus bombycinus. ed OO ae Syn. 1%rico Glumes chaffy, imbricated on all sides. Cor. none. Seed 1, invested with very long hairs. Spec. CHar. Stem naked, angular. Spike solitary, erect, shorter than the hair of the seeds. ie Gen. Cuar. Monogynia, PP TRIANDRIA ve a ies oy SEG **2, en ae en AP . ad HG = AChR i cLMd ay ad Ui 7 am ae ’ re oe > Sd > 4 -1) mst ° or ‘ a) ts ut . &” E a t. > ed ie. a a Oe Data oo ee Ma i iehe ee eead eT Se ae) aN leg ee Oe J ) > a Se \s oe rEX od) =) oe Bore a EID af Aess AYA ’ : pany OS ia ak Rae ° Be ° . ak) Pe Ree 1d Chee Pos aly ’ ; : $e Tet DKS ORT ac iar ek ies hk tihes hk inn aK tine Aoki | Wh Raa g alka PY KC y AC ee) Pai als p® Cie ma DIES tee 0 DKAAP Cs ag p DG 7) 0 DIS ed! On Cay DHE. r*e.Pe, DSK ae sk eK MA ak Mas asa Mia cackMiner ok Mine ik Mesa Bihan ch Mia tia r 1 os 4 2 CJ a) "tad p> be “s Ee 7re) " a) “te, FF Pe oe =. eo a ee a 2 ~*~. et) Pe DTK Mhiddd bd didi, i hibdidis ee a SOB Pe PL = P- 5 Cs Pd Das, Cites Ped bk hey See ar 5 Cte Pr - o te bc Oi ed > ie thd ee is < he Ss. z «te - 79. bein ‘hs “ate At > a alee 5 , Oe ” *. a Maes ree, 6 « ag bal ee Py f AND ie gl a Pe — ¢ a “Tie ENS Fed) a Cte iT S CR) Sees en % ou rr ah = eal Se Ue Bind-weed. ‘e Oc Small arvensis. or bE aC} CONVOLVULUS %e5 rdi we) f 312) = rhe Monogynia. el ne eer OE Syn. Mh Adiga Bracte With. Bot. Arr. 212. Sibth. Ox. 76. C. minor vulgaris. Sella Re folitary. minute, re- Huds. Convolvulus arvensis. Zinn. Sp. Pl. 218. Fl. An. 88. 86. bed dads << generally mote from the flower. Relh. Cant. Curt. Lond. fasc. 2. t. 13. Raz Syn. 275, ry PL °° 3 stp ed 7i¥ C oa or) ree DS | ayWa CBee ihe Pe Chon sr Flowers Ve 4 oe) Feed a) eT Gren. Cuar. Cor. bell-shaped, plaited. Stagmas 2. Capsule with 2 cells, and 2 seeds in each. Spec. Cuar. Leaves arrow-shaped, the lobes acute. ' 4 CT So PENTANDRIA a KG IR pitas 20 eat as ae RRB ‘sy than the common kind. Dr. Smith has observed this in a — LL Ae DC pee EG e\AL a) Gn Osh ass 3 ~ J Chi, BW ae a Ve 2.5 Le Fd Prarie.) ° oo Pry e % ie hedge out. of St Giles’s gates, Norwich. a Lo Oe 1 DEC DRG, OM Chae There is a singular variety mentioned by Ray, with a smaller flower, deeply divided into 5 segments, and of a darker red CdChie Ober, J, f ful, rose-coloured, varying with lighter or deeper shades and They generally close lines of crimson, the plaits yellowish. before rain; in dry warm weather they have a very sweet almond-like smell. Calyx with a membranous edge, the leaves Style Anthere red or white. obtuse, lying over each other. not very long; stigmas nearly equal to it in length, linear, diThe seeds happily are rarely perfected. stant. 2. stalks swelling upwards, with a pair of minute bracteze about their middle, which are downy, narrow, rather lanceolate than Flowers very beautisubulate, and sometimes even obovate. , Y = except one tooth sometimes near the base, a KG entire, Stipule none. Flowers from the bosom and a little downy. of each leaf, solitary, on long (generally undivided) angular ee in breadth, | fi er “f ™ But too common for the farmer and gardener in fields and all kinds of cultivated land, especially in a gravelly soil, flowering copiously from May to the end of July. The root is perennial, running so very deep into the ground, and growing so fast, that it is next to impossible to destroy it. Stems very numerous, long, climbing and twining round every thing in their way, angular, slightly downy, not much branched except at the very bottom, clothed with alternate arrowshaped leaves on downy footstalks. The leaves are very various One Othe ee Je i* A on KG Mel FF ee a , ae Lh ee TOs) Be we Ae eee eee te Ot tN " ld TF tle NC %, [2700 D3EG q vo a, aA Saxe Fa) <7 3 *s./5 >S eae) S/S “Fa. Gina So ke aks ; PL ans. aCe Ree ; rs @: Chee Pa ae s Peat yr) Rt) Chad S4/S06. Crk hoe iO) °Se, Gs a 3 : —_ » blebs& | ACO ' al . ; eet. emer tam Cid OL te TO : Oh okae Miteread oes, ES Se OE OE aa ed OC tae 8 AR ce Dette mens SRA Ta SS es teeta Ca ee, OY Cie ea AC) OFF ‘ APP ; oh we oad ‘ee ee DO in PS eG : ' oF A : ad | Ore eS DoK( Wr se Mok Maeack Biee asktea 4 cv LY a » ee IC) Ow Oe ee ne c Ae) “en, ooo s eo a a ee ats 2m Oy SO oO aC) ree ~~) DAurl ss, AO sse, ir ihe ee € A CB ad Adidas) bid d = Mi ag QAb 7a, iis De it te! pa Pi Pen 2 Ske peo i ee! es Men PY Erk Sn Se 2/1 Cad ee Ae the Oe en Ca ee + Ps . oe 5 tn itsin Cite Oh : —s at Oe ae? es CRs t has 2 D ‘ r ’ F - a . is . * “SEG Te "Fe .* Tt , we a > Cie ee i, Fe IK . - Ce Pa Ro PP (oe Mag IANG: Tyee Ben &). a ae SO \ 2% a a MS J 7 % | Se, aay : ee Py yale He, % vt '3 fay DBS 3278 Bind-weed. at AG LD €) Great sepium. Me DHS ee OLY CONVOLVULUS es >) thick. Seeds scarcely ever perfected. is said to be An extract of the herb Scammony. a A ¢.9 a! a ee) aC Va PP 79° aC OAL ee «at 4p, aC ev ” - ‘Che. ee aeNe) “oe Fd) <G a, bes og 7 x si, ad "4 KG (25 ats ae 1Y P 2,9 ce) r eA) a Corolla generally white, but sometimes {as Dillenius observes in Ray’s Synopsis) of an uniform flesh or Stigmas short and Antherze cream-coloured. rose-colour. RY? of 5 lanceolate leaves. 6 F Ree eA é Py es a violent purge, like Che os oe at i . ES Oia ie | Ps eo) a¥ - Flowers solitary, on axillary, undivided, square, curved stalks, with a pair of heart-shaped, red-bordered bractez, close to the flower and enfolding the proper calyx, which is smaller, at none. oe at Z Xs. aC Gy ed Pe Tus, one of the most elegant and graceful of all our wild flowers, is equally common with the preceding species, though its place of growth be different. It inhabits moist hedges, twining about willows and reeds, and decorating them with its very conspicuous flowers throughout July and August. The roots are long, creeping, and perennial, a little fleshy. Stems very long, twining, somewhat angular, smooth, not much branched. Leaves alternate, on smooth footstalks about half their own length, dependent, smooth, of a swelling arrowshape, with the angles at the base abruptly cut off. Stipulz | a a0) — Se i - * SO OE t r 7o is id ed Cuar. Cor. bell-shaped, plaited. Stigmas 2. Capsule with 2 cells, and 2 seeds in each. Spec. CuHar. Leaves arrow-shaped, the posterior lobes lopped. Flower-stalks square, singleflowered. Bracteze heart-shaped, close to the flower. Syn. Convolvulus sepium. Linn. Sp. Pl. 218. Huds. Fl. An. 88. With. Bot. Arr. 213. Relh. Cant. 87. . Sibth. Ox. 76. ‘Curt. Lond. fase. 1. t. 13. C. major. Rai Syn. 275. Ow Gen. WL) aC °° AKG Monogynia. i PENTANDRIA We oe TPL aw ahd o Se * Oe 6. a°2 2998 Oe Ce a Ox 32 eddee Se a v aC) ee aS a “ Oa ateOY ope) ee =ae MM Vo ee ao ee3 D aC or Oe PWT Fate de Me ate i we! eS met Pe Aen oe C ae DS a POT OE . Ae Ce - te Oe OS am oe esle7%s TL Chal Mor OL OCS Diss he alesse Bins ca eee | $e I s bey 9 Lid PP hited U “ del LO* rn Nah AF IC ted Ee Bie " * be - PKS DKS os 4 Ct OS : Pa oJ Cie Mie 4 Va, ae PL Chr ee hk) Meecha Mad Che. Mr ak oC} J ee eT cy Ov Ti ad Pr Oa ee ec acik iba : R ; 2 . ae) o eee eT EO) " se Rave at eytn S pee >» i, Pte “as CJ ats at “Ba, free *se/7@ er.) "a oe g et ee me 7 eee ae i eal , fs ie 0. he Ac Eee ora oat a a W -?e S\ Ake pS ledES Atte! a Pied LE alee| Ne tea) Fata x eae sole *® o.. ae) Pen JANN bs ad +2 Cie hoe ) %a, ae ie 7 “oy a t ‘ re Ale Se, eA" SANG <p tS - a "> AP ae) Dr} Pr) % RE at en eee ie ay<i nen a a ‘a Os F Sea \ ~ Quit\ ) e) ie. eer 7) ‘ \t/ fi y / PENTANDRIA 1 Gen. Cuar. 2 Spec. |. 55kG Stigmas 2. CHAr. Leaves kidney-shaped. NEF Flower-stalks Haibl MR Ahhh Syn. a Convolvulus Soldanella. Linn. Sp. Pl. 2926. AO. Huds. Fl. An. 89. palela belek: § <=. With. Bot. Arr. 214. C. maritimus, Soldanella dictus. oS Rati Syn. 276. A 59 i NATIVE of our sandy sea shores, as at Yarmouth, ey) ae By r ae —— ey ee WY li London. axillary, solitary, on and succulent. long Flowers few flower-stalks thickened upwards, and with 3 or 4 dilated membranous angles. Bractez if | | ¢° a rene hey al| aad) AF ca oe s q ~c RibhishVby 1’ Rverby The whole herb is smooth and large, large, ovate, close to the flower. ] Corolla with a ee lowish, Antherze yellow. four-lobed. angles, Calyx-leaves rose-coloured, large, ovate. the plaits yel- Stigmas small and sharp. Capsule oP %» o Oia or 8 ey BAL mae PSS TaN ay five acute ee : lar. al J | KC | rae? en OO ee [|f\ NF ghd a — Leaves on longish foot-stalks, small, dark 6 Chee Rs angular, purplish. green, heart- or kidney~shaped, entire, sametimes a little angu- OserVe, ing in a circular form, 5 or 6 inches long, but little branched, he hee Root long, creeping, perennial. Stems procumbent, spread- rn sk “i ry in the early part of the day. tO ; ie ; Ones RE The beautiful flowers may be found J2fite. et sent it from Weymouth. in July, not much later; they expand only in fine weather and ¢ os) ed Lowestoft, &c. The Rev. Mr. Baker and A.B. Lambert, Esq, 09,45 iG" a bell-shaped, plaited. single-flowered, with membranous angles. fo aed _——— Monogynia. Capsule with 2 cells, and 2 seeds in each. > hl eS Cor. it tees J Wa i Yi \ ae: \ \ ses .Y \ > Bind-weed. Au : en y 6\44 778 = y eT Be POL CRP CRA = a j 4 ri ere % ree) Se » ‘4 > R i? <> Soldanella. RE tee CONVOLVULUS Me Ps cs SOOEY i Fy ee f.: Sle . @\ Abe | A°*e a a \ acs PH: 2986 i) ll ha Pr oe Oe ed ee le A is OO a SRO Asi ite OF - ale p@®, ee OW Ke “Pan ee sy Sa/y> y io ee ee a - PS ee F > : ce ih, Se >: 4 Ap’ed bd Re Ree Pe oe TN e Om ry * er Pr 7ts MES ‘nee 2 ORL ACM Le ee nS as er Behe Tite A | ea) ieee kas ; : , Git, Bas ck Das P 4 hha dadid Aid) MONA ——.. = | ao Ce KAA ,, on ee al re © ea de Win dee, Ms ac sk Min chk ee P yr mat A liteOE RO x Oh Rep a hte ak Miata AM ve ri) aa ici pT aO\AR Riad asVE ORE OL7 hk Minn bch Miihen thik tiie Cle ok hd te Ce a hier ak Bi We A 3 4 - “9 a LJ fi 1» af Sk A ~ he Te oe pee ea? eee a ts DSA ae pe Sy ~t. *e, FinedHrakee@*o, = S)s¥% oe : be Y pd tT J ES e LentPoe a7ANG a Te a 7 > @) Vea re a) Ra Pade Ne rasta} ad re, 7 1} | eo (a *%,, OR Botha ar Neg a perenne. Om Spec. Syn. ar Ox DB J or Rye-grass. ry PN 9 v7) $6 OL OTE A Gen. Cuar. oie Perennial Darnel, G oy RR LOLIUM a sc) iy Linn. Sp. Pl. 122. Huds. Fi. folio et spica. ati ‘ A) Oe ra ¢ Ste mat ay - Syn. 395, > is ST alg angustiore ae —— loliaceum | | Gramen Leers Heré, 47, #. 12. (1. vin Sibth. Ox. 50. Reth. Cant, 52. wn With. Bot. Arr. 120. s ‘| ON An. 55, 7 a Lolium perenne. aay compressed, longer than the calyx. ad little spikes re The A’ beardless. GG & ar Flowers eA id .) Cal. of one husk, fixed, many-flowered. CuHar. C "99, GAs aS f eI TRIANDRIA Digynia. ae ae OC a Spike two-ranked and comgreen; stipule short and entire. pressed, the common stalk zigzag. Husks lanceolate and acute. ee Anthere cloven at each end, purple. above. Germen roundish. Stigmas sessile, downy Seed linear. Ohne he The spike is sometimes branched in an alternate manner, and more frequently very much condensed into a flat oval form. 5 ‘Che Bs wh : NeNP a” Londen : é Ss 7% EF ae] be POE) eee, AC *s Pa) A a rae) Ts 7 i ieee Pd aE> 1796 Jechlirhed by J! Souer-hy , V \ April Ohta ie Cae r E on a Me It flowers in June. en 3 mo é s rN 2 wy % Od a weed in their own fields. Its chief use is for an early crop of hay upon high or sandy lands, It makes a fine turf; but though the roots are perennial, it does not last many years, except (according to Stillingfleet) the soil be very rich, Root of a few simple fibres. Stems a foot high, round, smooth, rigid, with swelling purplish joints, Leaves dark CONE hie thence the seeds have been distributed throughout the kingdom, those who bought them little suspecting the plant was already af a = ‘Tuts very common species of grass is well known to the farmer by the name of Rye-grass, Ray-grass, or Crap. Its agricultural merits were first discovered in Norfolk, and from ay ? ae 2 7% NS eee oO i ee Sate 99g, Ce ee IE UG . ee an) a @r..% -*e oS Tee a > ead ee OY IAG sm \.2/"7s, 6 EON ee aC) oe ia Ie WE Te) : xs dee ee mS 5 9A af de nnd -) ym 4 Pn dlineSk kia “- , =a am *s eer Use ary PY Oee 00, 95K re NS rae ae Re _e ot” » al KM Al | y PR SO a, O36 Haute #1. DkCP6 ee aL ee AC) at EAC) Ee ene aC) he PANG ODS oCete CPPDS Dt phe uae DS Se | Dink Bie cask eras i Macack “ Bes ak Rito heck Mnscak tiie cai k tie nea Q)sur%te, dite Teme AOK Bs ae ee (3 4/7 a) SE ee ry iS 5G DES a DAG Mg DH oo. “A oD a KG he >a oe el)a oy PK Miata in tah tits Dtan s ik Miah = ine | | — —— dd i be ddd i HbA Addl i SY ‘ A) es Ce Dats ee Pd Pe rio Ate Pda ain PY 1 -* Th Gate Se ee . So_ Cee i a rae tae a OL » \F i) Er ? Cte7s ry ME a % cn |a Als Crested Dog’s-tail Grass. TS / AZ ‘o me) cristatus. *) ar 4 nO CYNOSURUS. Ae ee Pee rs Mead a Poeiy Ce ) Cal. of 2 husks, containing few florets. Partial Receptacle unilateral, leafy. ad Pe Cant. 39. bc Leers Herb. 49. t.'7. fi 4 Gramen cristatum. bh Sibth. Ox. 52. Adda bd ddd Li, Relh. Raii Syn. 398. OL # With. Bot. Arr. 95. ay iC An. 59. MMR oe Ae) VF hi at bd PAO MO Cynosurus cristatus. Zinn. Sp. Pl. 105. Huds. Fl. Ee rs éas ie i a LL grass is equally common with the preceding, making mf °*s Per Can Tuis o a principal part of the turf on high gravelly or chalky soils, in a] - AP tL, a, raat The root is tufted, perennial, with long simple fibres. Stems rat) ~ part with shortish, alternate, palish re 2 lela "Sy, very erect, from a foot to 18 inches high, rigid, round, smooth, clothed about the lower composed of numerous Fi A Che, C leaves. Stipule short. Spike green, erect, about 2 inches long, ran spikelets, al] leaning one way, on a zigzag stalk. Each spikelet is accompanied by another abortive which Linnzus calls the bracteee, resembling a small a A one, eC double-toothed variety with June or July. a yellowish 4 rows These colour of spikelets. remain in long decay. This upon Ray Cynosurus the stalk, mentions a flowers In ar) _ 5 at Hele *s, Re Cs,» . a 1 Cte ’ ¢ Chee ves cP 5 of ae , One turning comb. ONY >) ¢ pes aor to those animals as well as to deer. eo a and affords good nourishment Oh ei3 ie he ie Peg parks, lawns and sheep-walks, ib a 9 Syn. Bractez pinnatifid. e so Tete hal aX arte : RS. il ye he OS tau eS eC eae i Ce ee ee eT IO PVF Mee — “Monase ee “Bae 0 Ei TO i Ps NOU) TP Spec. CHar. 6 Gren. CHar. 4 2, as Cer TRIANDRIA Digynia. cs a EN CL or A " DIC) — on AV a\ Ol Sh , 1 eae: AS PO Oe ora ee tens -™e, Pcs OS ae Ta 7 ro Pate, aCe Ae a <p task litagahiahe netsh DT 7Che Chee a Arr) CRey sts Py as) PRE BeRe stained Oe Pier Cia Peete OEAL tiles didi MiB Adidas Lia| abaii ll | ; = I 3 OE Cie — f | * A tale ek ea ea Che EC Bae lia aA MOR Oke iRO Sa = aL aC RL ta G ohh Mr S47 "865 6) (2965 asks oe ok —. Chis eS ‘ she inaIC a a ae OSi aeort Ce GS Mieechuahe a DKG an oO evs 86g DK 4 Fs & ° i ee a gO tae <s we we, se we PSC <€ Havre, oO ee ee 3 se ay . ” ’ ie r 5 Ata Say ae ed Rd oe co eo ae bid Aea eed eee E > ae S\ Po 7°64, nate Ve So Asie a PF * 2 By ave ane Ng Pithe} oe > 26. a S %, . Cwpee Lee a , Pa a a oe ge ’ ee G4 7??, Fe t ae aoe Se) As Je ee$ cd a Nae b , ; > re Perr a | . Pa ran are Sr ti . Oy ae cz ie ‘ Heat, \ de, © er 3a Pa ae po < Un ” © ¢ FSSete OE +ah” , geo a eet AVS * i “4 rm eos Armeria. Pink. ry Me ( Ra) bal) aa i PEL 228 6) A Se TEL oO Calyx. ry in bundles. scales lanceolate, downy, equal to the tube. Syn. Dianthus Armeria. Linn, Sp. Pl. 586. Huds. Fl. An. 183. With. Bot. Arr. 440. Sibth, Ox. 139, Caryophyllus latifolius barbatus minor annuus, flore minore. Raii Syn. 337. aC ie Po, r—.) !te Caps. oe) Petals 5, with claws, cylindrical, one-celled. SPEC. CHar. Flowers clustered, FIN @ Cal. cylindrical, of one leaf, with about 4 scales at the base. The lower leaves are broad and somewhat spatulate; those at each joint of the stem, and under the flower s, narrow, lanceolate and acute; all opposite, entire, a little downy. Scales of the calyx of the form of the upper leaves, and as long as the tube. Petals a little toothed, narrow, sprink led with minute red dots, and marked with more or less of a line, ting in the centre of the flower. Each forming an eye-like flower lasts but one Se day, and there is seldom above one expanded at a time in each I a aT cluster. a) Re eh pas Ni Le Ais Ce Vy ae slee22g, Dslr r24, es OR ad ae CR eee 2 CN ~ _— OS ar a The seeds are black, flat and minute . ) AL av 63 Pe, ENE iv Che POPE Cu 3 July, and continue to bloom till very late in autumn. ee al iC) ew not 2 eee CT CNS van my or i Dr. Withering, Norfolk. Mr. Sowerby gathered the present beyond the Falstaff Inn on Gad’s hill, Kent. tapering and zigzag. Stem round, leafy, erect, branches very straight, downy, terminated by clusters of inodorous flowers, which appear in Ls as Mr. Woodward informed Cr) ks Re Cee eo NECa grows, unfrequently in specimen a little Root annual, subdivided, the little compound ee as and hte fd IL, OF Pada) ry re ALTHOUGH less striking at first sight than many of its beautiful family, the Deptford Pink will be found on minute examination to be very delicately pencil led, and to possess a great degree of elegance in its form. It loves a gravelly soil, SE Oho? CS eee e; a aCe, U VPs Ln Gen. Car. DECANDRIA Digynia. PC) en Or DE a ry Deptford Th Fa) DIANTHUS aa atvenrenusssummmasS vee, acd vo. G tL aCe ee ee L lal Cie Per MNS wae Oe SSE Bea chaas Co eros a TA a ies Fare Oa (eae) iain ioe) ee vee , ; hia Bin ack Hannah PR a ray eee Rel PPC bd res rx.me a dedi badd ida Ab ibid ii rhih a | ay WEG I pes ae ots DEG pe, AC) aa Grvr® Lae *¢, eas NO *tg, 2% f ee L te ORG *8e4 DIK G' te, DK C) Fe DAG ey, *to, Chee 2995,0 COL 9 86.,. D9KG a Mie Cr A Ree ee oe G “854 OK, 4 We } als pte, eS “> JS Bie ee >aRN Cie e, 7Ds Peer “ie. sie o22, “as my eae Le ae OSMUNDA SE castle hd a0) ar BO ee OO Moonwort. Filices. e?%g, +6 @)s ads sere LAs a aC eae iy Ss Jy ———— Ly ad =” plate 209 of the present publication we exhibited the Che In c\P) me Aibbibbiks a, aii Syn. 128. OA er ee Lunaria minor. = ae = =a es ee Gren. Cuar. Capsules naked, globose, two-valved. Spec. Cuar. Stalk on the stem, solitary. Frond pinnate, solitary. Syn. Osmunda Lunaria. Linn. Sp. Pl. 1519. Huds. Fl. An. 449. With. Bot. Arr. vol. 3. 46. Relh. Cant. 386. Sibth. Ox. 266. §)414 Storr 52 CRYPTOGAMIA Bee = > and O. crispa a Pteris), and we then promised to a give the fructification in a future plate. °*4 5 ae _ Blechnum, sy 7 iee te OL other only true British species of Osmunda (for O. Spicant. isa re* All we know of that eer part is the capsule, consisting of a small globe, separating into meee, HG the end of June or early inJuly. Mrs. Kett of Seething fa- voured us with this specimen from a meadow near her house. xe The root consists of thick fibres, from which arises one sim- ple stem, or (as analogy requires it to be called) a frond, com- ae, PY posed of a pinnate notched leaf, and a branching spike of capsules. Every part is smooth, but not polished, of a pale green, **s,,2 1 ee the capsules turning to a yellowish brown as they ripen. oe ah 2 es e( rT G as aeaa sn fb Hols 9, IIE . ? times the leaf is bipinnate, but that variety is rare. Some- Cee) DG moist and dry pastures, among grass, and arrives at perfection cS = The Moonwort, so called from an obscure crescent-like shape in its leaves, is by no means a common plant; it grows in both AD, a) Ve taining innumerable seeds like fine dust. ¢ Zé On two equal hemispheres, without any ring or bandage, and con- er rN 6\AL ORE 1 Oe FR Cee hor Pte, PIG aa EG **9, Sas) pcre Lunaria. Sa? i, Og eam ee ee os Oe CASS ld , a Ti ye A Sg f > Oe OO 7s a ETE a ee i a Ie ae eT ee a a.” WF le} eae) Wek fe eee tee way inl! at xl¥ fon ae Re a a : os \s ii Aishcdincehiah Mie . Caer , iC ae Wr Cary Pw RD I0 RK o ‘ 2 . —OeP 5 aa S as if Minha Mend dan tidbit Aiea Minncak Died | Seen MUR ddd a dd Add i A ad , me " f ave pee ret ea i " ae ae) er " WEN CeO > ie | tere Haur*s. S: Pe eh a. TEE} eC) ah Pa NOL ear 5 hat PL ey ie Ne) Sg ry ©or Oe NW AP nh — "Se. Pe Fee ic) © edwea, ie) i | art ao at SE. A ee a Ul cach Min ak Bes ask MeBinet ca sk Mie sk Met ack Bart cack Bins skMes ask Bina ck thie ck a.) oe ¢ os ON ey te 772, es AO A Mm ox a Se, vad gl cf ya fp a 7 n ea EC VACCINIUM Oxycoccos. $ ar by eA ce Cranberry. aoe cy 0) LL PL Wr LPL Oo” ee Lb aa) > © aC) Wr Mey 6 DA = . DKS <w/ gt / By) 1\ Th a a O oF Se WwW eT Monogynia. Gen. CHar. Cor. of 1 petal. Filaments arising from the receptacle. Berry inferior, with 4 cells and many seeds. SPec. CHar. Leaves evergreen, entire, revolute, ovate, acute. Stems creeping, thread-shaped, smooth. Syn. Vaccinium Oxycoccos. Linn. Sp. Pl. 500. Huds. Fl. An. 164, With. Bot. Arr. $95. Relh. Cant. 154. Dicks. H. Sicc. fasc. 5.11. Oxycoccus seu Vaccinia palustria. Raii Syn. 267. i SN ee eNO eR OCTANDRIA aes —————- SENT from near Scarborough by Mr. W. Travis. It grows Stamina OT RNC CR flat, downy. Anthere deeply cloven, discharging the pollen by a hole in each point. Berry pear-shaped or globular, of 4 cells, red when arrived at maturity, and often spotted. Our figure Tepresents it not fully ripe, in order to show the cells. Cranberries, when prepared with sugar, are grateful to most palates. T hey are brought to London from the moorland counues, and even imported from Russia. The Swedes have no idea of putting them to any other use than to boil silver plate to its proper whiteness, the sharp acid of the cranberry cor- DKS ge LEN ‘e a ery a gst PP hy G he ral < i e A, ae € LO) 2 MY, T\ Ay 7S Je ¥ Ce Ce eC) roding the external particles of the copper alloy. Chern See Son this species to form a distinct genus from Vaccinium. Cee leafy, ¥ procumbent, eA scattered, We Oe FR Branches C Me roots. >) =4 iG fibrous flowering about the upper part. Leaves alternate, on short foot-stalks, small, evergreen, ovate, entire, revolute in the margin; dark shining green above; glaucous beneath. Flowers stalks about an inch long, red, with a few scattered or opposite bractez, and each bearing one drooping red flower of singular elegance. Calyx in 4, obtuse fringed segments. Corolla deeply divided into 4 ovate petals, on which account some have judged as long 2@@ The roots are perennial. Stems shrubby, slender, trailing and creeping by means of oO berries ripen in August. At, a Sees bog mosses, which cover the surface of clear shailow waters, so that those who gather the fruit are obl iged to wade up to their middle to get at it. The flowers come out in June, and the ee Oe on turfy bogs, mostly intangled in tufts of Sphagnum and other sca eae Ca 9 CaS teen Ce cnn aeRO ORS See [ 319 J ae 5 : ,A : i . kK et Sir) nc a td a gO eds>| ON M2 e%8g, 6s hi eS Ot SO 7% te Pee. Ce eae ed sD a, PL ee a) . a are a a re Tre Or Ie Te ae ee ae OY mer > Pe gk Nin a SRR ek ek Pi Obes Fee, G5, Mi Mie 5 Dh aX Bint ack § SD) eon a ; aN \ ee KG Aa RL $4665 ae PE scree bt ro Ch tet):Wak om Bean + AA ssh Dn A.sA Dies Zak tin as A ie ac k ies ask inn ick ins ich Miia cask Mie ~ ae Ro ors Aaa < Ls], “4 é « ) PGq/ one) Se bea BS anne oa) ee Sais ey ae Oa -% eae ACY or) os) as 5 nO) Pe 4 way : a 4) Ce oe PP Se ey sho pint yy PN ae } Aa " ” ‘ aa >... ; ‘ al ‘ye 1c Be pe d y - fee —— - . p - om é ©. e rk } 7 A ao Pa | , ea. . T. ri - ? . me e.epligs? * Ot Pa meh é RK Pm ~~ . : a, aa ras Ss a8 i NE J “Fey, i Cae Luteola. ee, RESEDA iG) [ 320] G tr Dyer’ s-weed, or Yellow-weed. ed S ey ed inf ed Ay a ey aay ae ae; tooth on each lanceolate, side at the base. Calyx with one in 4 seg- Try rete ee Syn. Reseda Luteola. An. 207. Linn. Sp. Pl. 643. With. Bot. Arr. 492. Huds. Fl. Relh. Cani. 184. : S a TAL ROY en Ae] Cy Sibih. Ox. 150. Luteola. er ] entire, og od, any4 Ne Leaves ©) AV ees nee ae, ASG “rs CuHar. ments. eee Raii Syn. 366. ee ES on the upper Stamina numerous, side the lateral ones simple or 3-lobed. of the flower, hanging down. notched, Valves There is a variety mentioned by Ray with curled ma = 3 DHee°%s 6\4L- pte 4 *s,.275G ary ee a ee aC) Y Oar 9 aaeA \ greenish. of the capsule Aa acute, with 3 yellowish intermediate appendages. or undu- The gaping capsule of this genus is remarkable. ry ee PP ae i) x Gs, bdr 7 aR le af GV Gs Ty lated leaves. a without much é Be ha Bae nL Oletg its middle lobe cloven; Nectary flowers Petals 3, the uppermost 3-lobed, € pale greenish Ne of numerous Calyx in 4 seoments. ¢ bat u f} smell. QS = Gg bee consisting Leaves alternate, lanceo- Spikes terminating the branches, ® somewhat angular, branched, leafy. late, obtuse, entire, smooth. Z nual, and flowers about Midsummer. Root small and taper. Stem 2 or 3 feet high, erect, thick, Cee } OUND chiefly on waste ground, walls and similar places, plentifully about Norwich, where itis used in the woollen manufactory for dyeing yellow and green. The entire plant when about flowering is employed for that purpose. It is an an- ROP i' a ie eae ey Petals jagged. Fb Spec. OR Ree Cal. of one leaf, divided. Caps. of one cell, open at the top. 4” Gen. Cuar. wae ENS ¥ 7 Si aee Trigynia. ao "Ss SF ated a rod } SACLE PY aE Be ILLS " Pots o: = a A Por ee Ne ee — Ce ee oe > Se py A Ce . ah b) Ted3) Se eT ee DODECANDRIA ie Ais ’ os = N\A oad oe io aiik ms Be ee De Ck Peer A Be ve ay » RO ACE 0 ST p LT ea) (Oe) TY A Be LOR TOL Rsme er C of Nig fe ia Aa 7 Bie OP ® Pa Cel Cid Sa nO id Cis Clee hee Bias Bs MPLJ ee Ciehas en eee Se Se VA dn ar Fr teat een Egle TOAC teeathe) tOaa) ES Ed en ame LAlee Week iia ANA ies rac sk Maha kk hee ® hee Eo BLP x iat Oe OME Oh Cl AL Re Lie ACTS ah OL ie. a OS Ce °SE (,? on, = aE 4 is A ee 7 "Oe ae ey or ee ae Sa T-) oat ea) aC) i pe! Ma a eS p@e Ag i a + Se rs an > ce Pee. Bn ae ae —— iat se an oe 2 a or © ee, MOP mn a ‘i , a hak SF Pe ic } A 7 leg) ‘ 1 ae bed a N Cl orm aadee aT @) N24 ‘ 77%0 « { - Syl 4 iF ail | b . ty : * ffies ¢ F ~ ce: Ce oe i . S10 , Or , sa ek Pa igF . “ @\«t © c rte, \ i’ ee , ee a oNLe Gee FANS) © 7 he he i oe “ae F ; ae Be > LET) Pa at Neca ad NT oa a e oa 3 a ae} es \ lutea. )a RESEDA DHEGC*. ae ON LLY ie fo 991J ed RO Ox. R. vulgaris. a eee m0 GaN a ars gag S 2 Reseda lutea. Linn. Sp. Pl. 645. Huds. Fl. An. 207. With. Bot. Arr. 493. Relh. Cant. 184. Sibth. Fo Py C) cS i.) 151. Raii Syn. 366. ~ he Ohne s‘Che ey % Ea ty aCe S cL 6 ha BV as Sd FR CeePa) J ¥ Ve ECan °be * ¢ Yan ae be the winter, as happens to other species of this genus. 4) Nectary green. The Reseda crispa gallica of Boccone and Ray seems to be a very trivial variety, having leaves a little more curled, and, in consequence of a mild climate or season, living through Oise 1 hate Peo) oe , ee a ie ee singularly lobed as expressed in our figure. A, species is rather less general than the preceding, Pee Tuts being confined to chalk countries, where however it grows very abundantly, and is very ornamental, flowering from June to the end of autumn. Root annual, strong and woody in substance. Stems several, branching into a thick bushy tuft, round, smooth, leafy. Leaves alternate, in three or more linear undulated pointed segments, paler beneath; the lower ones once or even twice pinnated. Spikes terminating the branches, of numerous sulphur-coloured flowers, Calyx in six segments. Petals six, GHyav Ns a - OSSOY ce WL fe bas]*¥4,5 od NRO a ieee ee the 2 > ee Pe Syn. LV de a aC) All the leaves with three segments; _ lowermost pinnate. x “| 4 Se Spec. Cuar. Petals jagged. |‘ Cail. of one leaf, divided. Caps. of one cell, open at the top. "4 Gen. Cuar. Trigynia, 2 cL DODECANDRIA PC Chee er) B ORG "*e, . > Wild Mignonette, or Base Rocket. a». o rime a ACs |)! 1)) UCU 4, ce ee Tr) N es of Pe ee Ass i ad he ee eas i 2 >) Vy) ry G* an! aE || Ma meme tials ByAL+ Cotes a ee Lee) PN es %»,. Paes 2 oe ee, ale “Bap oe : ” CTS MANCOH ae woOimM , Oi a OR ‘ Q AC air s RE Che a tial sahil litaehioh tnsetah Mirth Dinette Pw T wse ‘ p ORL CCR Ota eS ihDene K Bina A Dechy my hk LE oe Ssyee a hee ; Fak VA ae) tack Bier cask Bins hak Mae aah Bae aask Biasex tie ,) “He DARE a DEC. DG 0, DES tag DEG te DS Mo DEC eg Binnssod Bren. sA Mee Ah Saran Be Sn ' tes OT) ee SS eg oe See ea ae e ee Pee ae te. Oy we, ra iJ ; -% HKG OAv “te Ee ' es ay . eS AS 4o%e (7S @\5h- YY te a tt a ™ ee) ; S & ~ ies be wed BS SS ny pe a , a -_ SY et a) a - ee Sre a . . CN sy eal 3 A ° ieAe Se MD es Ee A bier isé ft - ele On. ein ee US Oe ee he ox Bo, JALG ; ._ ae ' , S ad Ce c NPP fe , ot a i ee > a H 7 lig ye a. A , ant? ; ch oT ae Pk | Oe a Gee FANG) SF g0 A | AC) or PU rts: "Ma DUS i9 “#6, LY ary SL cf - aS ry 2. " TN $22-] ee AC ia hatte, [ ah ae Le PE AC . > Cranesbill. 5 OG Dusky pheum. aor POI OLY GERANIUM _ Ww Caen ov Cor. of five petals, regular. ~ ir Syn. A :. Geranium pheum. Relh. Fl. An. 301. G. montanum fuscum. OPO ; : : i ¥ > Linn. Sp. Pl. 953. Huds. Cant. Suppl. 2. 14. azz Syn. 361. ae Pad Tse GSo’ TY 7 ») a)Cy ae) ry Lr rau 6, 0766 oT y" Be eee, ye Nectary five glands at the base of the longer staFruit beaked, separating into five arilli, mina. each tipped with a long simple naked awn. Stalks two-flowered, in a leafy panicle. Sprc. CHAR. Petals Calyx slightly pointed. Stem erect. rugged below, hairy Arillus kneeled, waved. Oi Style one. Lid eek a Bd 2mG ne or Gen. Cuar. 1 oe Decandria. a) PIO F MONADELPHIA : ee) Oe) tex at their bifurcation. Calyx-leaves elliptical, upped wine small point, hairy.» Petals dark chocolate-coloured, wavy; with a white claw. Stamina all fertile. Seed-cases strongly keeled, clothed in the lower part with thick upright hairs; at en The leaves are the summit naked, and wrinkled transversely. many-lobed and crenate, downy, with prominent interbranch- oT ~ a Ing veins; the radical ones on longish foot-stalks, solitarily placed opposite to each flower-stalk, and gradua ” lessening towards the upper part of the stem, oe ,eo See ey like the bracteze, though somewhat larger. a Ae Pee <6) PS te Bef ae AVS | Fe . es As pa Oe a i Re a ’ es f a ET) 7 EG Stipulaz much oo 6) Ae hd Ps 06 S\ALe Prat bie " : af, x aS ee) Che iter rm 5 adi . raed lee he Stem erect, hairy, a Ohie Root perennial, thick and strong. and terminating in a panicle of numerous flowers, om apreaei"s bractwo-flowered stalks, with two pair of smal} brown chafly SS =, iG Se but it is perhaps the rarest British Geranium. It inhabits drycountries, flow pastures and thickets, chiefly in mountainous ering early in summer, and is often cultivated in . i ae in Lancashire, wich, showed Dr. Smith specimens gathered of Cambridgeshire and Mr. Relhan mentions it as a native > SE, Chepee iO CL oC OY en MY W E received this plant from the Rev. Mr. Abbot of Bedof Norford, who found it at Everholt. Mr. Sims, druggist, ae ed - Tots a a) a RO Li ke Othe dN ee AOR PRL, Ce©s Or ATE Cee er Chk ROR eta Ree OL ROEFr On Chel Oce hor Al AOR ee i # Oi AC io Caan Cie a ass" che MOL 7 he ROS CRY Ciel PR a TL oe Or Cd Me SON . é ne 5 Olnar : ee ee) 7 me SC ev aC) r >= ee -e Tae) Sud ek) “> VP a rr ae a Paes A ny Ces i a aa SY UJ Lf i AD oo 3 9. Evi Pat Tae * nL ea ee SonnnO POTAMOGETON : is ie) she he ©) } pectinatum. PPL $23. ee a0) See f at RDO Ao by Fennel-leaved Pond-weed. ie regen Tetragynia. TETRANDRIA Style none. Petals four. Cal. none. Cuar. Seeds four. y Leaves bristle-shaped, parallel, thickl Spzc. CHar. if é 2 or June or July, in flowers only rise above the water about larly. but clustered two or three together irregu re . Antherz yellow, Petals kidney-shaped, of a dull olive colour entire. e, Stigmas obtus very distinctly two-lobed, Aer @ a AN) 998) be Ase aO OA Cee ic eM) o5 Ce Ni ees oS ‘p\ +», 3 G2, ws - ry e>» 7 ‘Che .®) AEG Pte, ? ¢ Clea 028 %, ing in two directions, are flat, and grow alternately, spread sheathing bases. The on the small branches, having long a simple spike, Pee ate ding often two or the stem, which floats under water, exten w and pointed, narro mely extre three feet. The leaves, though >) aA G Pop. <f, Tae BZ 76 SAL at) c a) i ry raat) ede ae en of the PutamoTHe Linnzan Herbarium has no specim y of this plant in histor whole the from geton pectinatum; but be no doubt of its being Linnzus and other authors, there can are sure this is what We what we have here delineated. specimens from himed receiv g havin Mr. Relhan intended, though, if the rivers, in ly quent unfre not occurs self. It stream be rapid, it rarely flowers. from a tuberous lump, The root is perennial, originating branched, as is also much r, slende , ntally then creeping horizo a, i é RRR Cee eer ay ee — teS TTT ae NO esa Rai CT oO} um. P. millefolium, seu foliis graminels, ramos Syn. 150. Paar Y 66. WJ Sibih. Ox. & Cant. 72. a L 5 Cate se Linn. Sp. Pl. 183. Potamogeton pectinatum. With. Bot. Arr. 175. Relh. Huds. Fl. An. 76. ee Syn. bi Pe Wabi i hd PL - ICR set in two ranks. Je athe Se Cen. a aD ot Ne Me als OL me ie +. Ce eae) sd ero te a “IES ‘oo ee — MOSS et ~~ a ry ORL Pe hk, ar Ae ot eA ia DR Na Pay Me eR dey Tie ek Re SOR RN he aa M4866. RLS hieos Oreree ask Bi es Rid Dl ls hie ae oe aks Pe hk 111 dedd aiid dod Wlbh Sh iddh iad , ; De OO aC eee iach vee ee CR er sk ated A hia a ie SO ORIOL CMI CCl he CRT ACME AChR Cs @ i ins isk Dias ash ihe nce kai: sae o)ses’o. BScs rf he cz any aw Mier eee ee Leash Diba hk Sd eS PC) PO, i 5 aS = 7 oe, rac) ld = a <] = eS oe AC) On se eT gh i a. 2.2Cc @\3 ChePs ae Chie ee tek. vy reste ie J id a) 6. DAG 324 ] granulata. ud “a HeG"*e, TREMELLA 2 a OOS Cee [ bY aor KG ce Fruciification scarcely perceptible, Cuar. membranous jelly-like substance. nous, Spero. CHAR. Green, globular, clustered, membra containing a fluid. a Be ey %oa TN tions. Mr. Relhan justly observes ’s Syst. that the Ulva granulata ENS * ° fa yaa PaaS Oe CRS Va a ® of Veg. taken up from the Mantissa, must, from 5 f} Fe x] Murray from that intended in the the description, be a different plant Speeies Plantarum and Flora Suecica, which last 1s unques 9 Ey ed Ly ‘6 bi Che F *s ma) e ie PO a’ Gav Td 95 Tr iy a“i 6 PP ar ys as rt Ma) . Als # SG ei ie Cie oF , Ce) NS Pr 6s ¢€ M G**s, ak “ Ss Py oP rt tee tionably our present Tremella. s ee ice, and by an orifice at the top, taneously, as the plant advances in age, es, forming a little collaps and immediately afterwards the skin ied representamagnif our See cup with a hole in the centre. PRO the feet like thin walked upon they crackle under comes out sponalso hich w fluid; discharge a watery When \szse ae but not leaf. a a SE Ca ROL Ae Sw 8, 1795, at Camberwell GATHERED very abundantly Sept. mud of ditches in that the on also up, dried partly in a pond rable green globules, neighbourhood. = It consists of innume first, but soon elevated at sessile about the size of mustard se ed, by fibrous roots, mud the to ed attach on a thick foot-stalk, y any kind of crust or connected with each other b C9, OF5G een ORO i i c i ee os a ; : es pI : ne ee Corea palustris, vesiculis sphzericis fungiformibus. Dill. Muse. 55. t. 10.f. 17. 136. Ulva granulata. Linn. Sp. Pil. 1633. nec Mant. spheis vesicul vel is Lichenoides fungiforme, capitul 70. ricis aqueo humore repletis. Raii Syn. T. ea. Se aes =~ Gotting. 28. C "s Sea BL pat With. 44) wan oY Weis Huds. Fl. An. 566. Relh, Cant. Suppl. 1. 26. TN > mm ee * . Ai bpididdd cit Bot. Arr.v. 3.225. T. globosa. ee, Saaee ‘Tremella granulata. ¢ Syn. | | a | | ee Ee 1 SOS LE Gen. ts oes” EY ir d a CRYPTOGAMIA Alge. Cihee a ¥\ Granulated Tremella. AGL ti) u Ake BPs Aote Oi Pete eA a ei OR eo ee eS * - eel PS te |S OB WS te FkRie Ee a iOR eS eetOe hd setae led ONE ; CR er eg ee ieee. es elle a . —-. det ah | Ze ea 9 es ESey Cake? C1 ry A Deets, a? A / Or. rySs (o° 5, D3t ORae nm ae i ee Se ya. 42 *6 Se oo? aC Med yey §) Qses Rr Cite Cte oer Ce S , i ey ‘ EO)E DP < Oak Tn. eae Dien ik Rinne Rie ie r : a6 Ca a DK a ee Deke ree, cares | an POE i. Od OL 5 Cteoe. lsc Mn sOk Pie) ne PoE IG thd Abad addi aa ee ne i $6 U DIKG : 0, O26 thes 5 zeal RL Chet a MeO eee ee OM ee OL AC types NG OS Oh er.) et PAC i 5 Pe ees KG ed Cen? a ki nk Bikes OL A Ba iach a] tad ETC) AS OO SSO SCT s! I hs Clee he, a St OO ry Fs ~~, AO ied cso a wu Os.97 ie ats) a cts, Nee eee | ne nie i | | » %edwe C's oa Navel-wort. er Leaves peltate, scolloped. Stem spiked, 7 Wild re Fl. An. 194. BI With. Bot. Arr. 463. Sibth. Ox, 143. Raii Syn. 271. CL ieA y . o\.4 Pad ped) cs 4 C. vera, radice tuberosa. = ¥\ONI Che — Car. rarely branched. Flowers pendulous. Bractez entire. Syn. Cotyledon Umbilicus. Linn. Sp. Pl. 615. Huds. VA aC Spec. a Atle Hii Hi i} a CuHar. Cal. five-cleft. Cor. of one petal. Nectary of five scales at the base of the germen, Capsules five. ¢ OER Gen. Pentagynia. TY, DECANDRIA karo OM Common Unmbilicus. aD aN (Chae, COTYLEDON DEG arm ans. }} a CLS See [ YANG Ty) nc ES \ Se D0 ~ ee Fr t ils y a a 4 ‘e Ess a a) CJ é ments. FS i‘> 7S 6 g7 Anthere on very short filaments, inserted in two rows just within the orifice of the corolla, and not projecting beyond its margin. 7 Though this be the variety 6 of Linnzus, yet being by far more common than his a, we think it best to retain 1t as the If the a (Mr. true C. Umbilicus, as all authors have done. i iS Hudson’s lutea) be really distinct, we shall take some other opportunity of describing it. a Py ey) 234 Gav nate ya) aC} aCe wm), Rs a ea a he re a eee @, ey the higher they are situ- entire bracated, and at length changed for small, lanceolate, tee. Corolla cylindrical, the margin in five small erect seg- GALL *t less peltate and more deeply notched 2 PoC oN3 Lee ? Oe eek rocks. In Gerarde’s time it grew over the door of Poet's Corner, Wesminster Abbey, but was not to be found there It flowers in June, when his second edition was published. and Jasts through July. Stem round, very succulent (as Root perennial, tuberous. are also the leaves), purplish, erect, terminating In a simple or branched spike of numerous, drooping, pale-yellow flowers. Leaves smooth, mostly peltate, on longish foot-stalks, more or less deeply and acutely creniate, those on the stem becoming s a The plant is most by we are indebted to the Rev. Mr. Hemsted. frequent in the west of England and Wales, growing on moist “9, F OR this wild specimen, gathered on walls at Peterborough, eT 2 Oe * . Fa eet ts — (\S cS Py a ie F AY wv) Pry Cet O) { ft ul a 0 \ ee ee A i DSae Sane a bee ea MC ed nL) ee Ee ae) ee. = Ss OR es SO PP re aes Sel 4 | Pac 2 one iat %oo) aisk Bieta , iS ‘ aC nee PEG , hak i ar a sO0 ide ate TG rik ta VEY Rid SO"cam ‘Ss r Ge DKS thas ; m sesbg Ped DSKG © dai ddd a ll bel add babi KC * 1 a ON PT 1 @ U 5,5 SEG sh iin cai ‘ eres ts, 5) ee ve ss Obes: 5) Ad C y aK TOE, Bhat ts, inn, O3KGeee Lt Ped ac 3 ee et ry ME oePa: t.,®- TaChe PL 6 ae)be > ry a ok Mites rack. Siaee huh lithaathaih an WF ate : a “ye CF: Ack ies Lax ch Dita hk cer cee Saas 3, rr) SY ie °a Lad 7 Ce a }! é % Jase Pe ee & A 5, inf SY ee ry eid $ eg 2 Me deh aT raed a ae bad Rd | Pe Re, DS v an =, } HS ei A ce err Wa 4 fiat ALISMA _ ] i Rie EB [ 326 ranunculoides. % > bor bl .2e ay DKS nM : Lesser Water Plantain. of three leaves. Abs "Seo As Petals three. Ct Se Fl. An. 150. °% Szbth. Ox. 120. 2)kA 7 ’ ° ST Oe he Ca ie ae 3 Onear] pee A ig ee CR rae Pr Oe a eC ns a Oats aS “te I7Ae eae “2, Sed’ p> AS PP Ec) oat4, ie Saas nS a ee) ae © or) a ed eee kd Se ew et) oa) 6 “ lp , vy Als YG or Oh el, ees rw yy Oe bs Stalk mostly taller than the leaves, upright or decumbent, round, smooth, bearing two or more whorls (often proliferous) of flowers on long flower-stalks, with small membranous bracteze at their insertion. Calyx-leaves small, roundPetals much larger, of an elegant ish, concave, permanent. expanding in the middle of base, their at yellow purple, pale Stamina short. Germens very nuthe day, slightly waved. Merous, collected into a small globe. Seeds with five angles, and an acute point, forming a round bristly head, by which it may always be distinguished from every variety of A. Plantago, the seeds of which are very blunt and compressed. CF *89, foot-stalks. re August. Root perennial, of many long simple fibres, as in most aquatic plants, from the crown of which arise several upright, narrow-lanceolate, smooth, entire leaves, on long very spongy Oe I“ CR RRR et se eee er ta J aii Syn. 257. —_ —_ *<| Relh. Cant. 3 Linn. Sp. Pl. 487. Huds. With. Bot. Arr. 382. in swampy turfy places, not very frequently. Grows M. J. Rayer gathered it on Finchley Common, flowering in ET eC MY nw ets ee YY eT ik) glo- Wa Fruit = ranunculoides. 158. Plantago aquatica minor. Tr linear-lanceolate. A Syn. Alisma Leaves Seeds acute. i} en mas geamnea resent bose. JAS Spec. CHar. 2° Cal. ¢ ° Cuar. Seeds many. EGS Me DING Oe Gen. Polygynia. % \4tp rea a HEXANDRIA ba 49 Cie PE: : Cit 4 at iC Ma Ox 49,8) Me) peo Or’ aC VT aT al OF a he EC) RIO he 6, DAK OG PaO Chal a, Pon oe . Pry *, CRN Bet aces iecacie DECI NNCEARNE 8 mn yt Ts ORS diddds Fe DK | DSi Bee Se AO ee [ry eT tec Oe ad a7 eee er = eas en mC a7 he aden ry) EG Ce ackOe Wie cack Menard Roarkx Deinte <i rs he CPE 47°86 Cth Pee eed AC Pt oDMe OF pt Po ic) a 6). a) a “Be FIO POP c) ST . eT ate . ew S we ten IP VES i 9 Os s Ee Se <4S552aC 7%, | — Abd ii ee f729%, Pe » ok zs e “oe, es Lr ee ‘i { la f } (e a — “#0, 97 SO) as *, if L Pa & S| Ar: v7) Pee! ENE 7a we yu I G°"%,9 { oy [ aa { aie yh One I B ERI S _aoudicaulis. Candy-tuft. Iberis nudicaulis. Linn. Sp. Pl. 907. Huds. Fl. An. 285. Waiih. Bot. Arr. 682. Reth. Cant. 249. Curt. Lond. fasc. 6. t. 42. Dicks. Hort. Sicc. fasc. 1. 10. and simple ae Ing flat upon the ground. Stalks several, ae ET LY CY on compressed flower-stalks. the Calyx of four equal, concave, purplish leaves. Inner or upper petals as long as the calyx ; outer ones about twice as long ; all entire. Stamina all very nearly equal in length, though the two outer ones, being more Spreading, seem the shortest, all of them bearing, on their inner side, near the base, a very singular petal-like appendage, which authors have not much noticed. Pouch curved upwards, conconyex below. RT Pn WO na ete Tp & oe) a 6% ees aS a) iC Se Wr I Nf 7,aes . Ceaser one cave above, C ba wore 4 unbranched; central one always erect and naked, the others spreading or decumbent, often bearing one or two leaves. Flowers white, in a small corymbus, afterwards lengthened out into a spike, ‘ys ray ee ran! a». oth, 1793, being quite a spring plant. Root annual. Herb varying much in size according to the “eid or less luxuriance of the soil, and consisting of several leaves ofa lyrate form (a few of them generally entire), spread- CR Ned eo Ole cee May ea That now before us is found on a dry gravelly soil in several places about London, Norwich and Bury. We received it from W. Matthew, Esq. in flower, f\) figured in this work, plate 52. + as Tuere are but two species of Jberis found in Britain, neither of them very common. ‘The amara has been already ak apt ro fa F po 303. Pa Syn. ae aii ein Re a ae FREY petreum. OR NE” I iS1 naked D Syn. Nasturtium herbaceous, Nery PS oY CuHar. Stem Leaves sinuated. s Spec. a7 external petals eh] Cor. irregular, the two being the largest. Pouch with many seeds, notched. Nr aC the ei,5 Ces TE Gen. Cuar. Siliculosa. ay iyiC TETRADYNAMIA er ie) PL ser ROL cE 10) aor . > Naked-stalked OR ites 9K Co S Pay. a rs a ba y mJ ad AS ; SeXe pe ~s ee le 7759 . a >| eed A A Se Oe) ste te, Oe i Se Se Torr.) 2234 eS % ow oA i ee , OL VY Ae Sh MS BN ie Ree art ree a eg ray Rat ea IT AC Ne a Hs Au7*e.. wr C) sd PY i ink i eek ta , io as we me We 1 oF ead ST Ras c ee Pee L or PL eee ca) AC ted een es | pepe Dspee te Ee eee ,4 + oC OE ACS ROY Cl ea TOY ns ete EEK: aes Pen RY aA % x eee Mae casi Mat cacsk inne cask linn ick Masha cshaaitiahde CMa Cac Dane ak Marsha cack : ru 4 QA, Ce a tn ese aC ee rhy aC ee ay aPe ee a ee IC a gO 7) he “San ee Ale i ee ry tet eS ae dS » sileen AY "Be 34 e, SEC,oe a ee 2e0 @\ dt > Oo a a. > Po f ae ay ’ Peers hae is v P . e \ ae » ay ,e4 | Miia Sy , ST 7 a < \OF ging nh Ae ¥ ee u 8 . late | @) ) 447770 Zz Ga os : 794 % 6 : s ie } 4 ad eS . b \ a . i Le r f ,# H<¢ - “i . *p > Pa’ Nee Ca a ; *%e 7 " ae ZOOS at s ra F 5LY AP chili, vat h oe ae Pe b> pha . © Pa “Pe SO « No ROc ta a le « ¥ >7ie Olas e De . a ;A % &g5 y vA OR SgPoi eae ve Be DIKE Ce ce [ 3298] reticulata. <a ed “a ws 93 Le aa) A ae) ee X| 228 Huds, plant Sic. ¢, 44. is too imperfect to be of any service. Rae OE oR ROL ere Ae aA DE wd as iO *®p, a la Pao aayEF Cee >) x ef FN Oe ex- Pee of this Bie Maro i. , tO OCS i CINKi hs A Eras il Ta Re | é) iC) 7 a aw SS Ce se OT een Boccone’s figure ¢. 42. f. 4. is most like S. echioides, and ial Plukenet’s SF ee Ce Cl There cannot be said to be a good tant. Chk little crisped and tuberculated, ¢ The bark in our specimens is a which we do not observe in the Linnzan ones. Many of the branches are barren, and those often reflexed, but not always. Flowers few together in simple terminal spikes, erect, each enveloped in three or four larger sheathing bractee. The ribs of the calyx, and the petals, are of a bright purplish blue, which turns white in drying. : a rae) a SS SCN OS Tuis species of Statice is hardly to be found in any other part of Great Britain than on the coast of Norfolk, where it covers many acres of muddy salt marshes with its blue flowers in July and August, especially about Wells, Cley and Holkham. Our specimen was gathered below Wisbeach, by the Rey. Mr. Hemsted. Root strong, woody and perennial, bearing thick tufts of small, narrow, obovate, or wedge-shaped, leaves, slightly pointed, and entire. Stalks prostrate, destitute of leaves, very much branched, the branches zigzag, matted and entangled with each other, with an ovate, sharp, membranous bractea at each divarication, ) J] a Midi dMMMdiLA o/ Statice reticulata. Linn. Sp. Pl. 394. Fil. An. 183. » With, Bot.” Arr. 327. bes SYN. ta PL ASC) Cuar. Stalk panicled, prostrate; its branches zigzag, the barren ones bent back. Leaves wedgeshaped, a little pointed. i Bill i dl Seed single. Spec. Olean \ Cal. of one leaf, entire, plaited, filmy, 6) Ay Cuar. Petals five. ed DES Gren. Pentagynia. ee PENTANDRIA phe DKS Ma DEG Matted Sea Lavender. era DKS Me STATICE Hii Ch ms My” il tae DIES ee OG “Pa!fi Ui a SY ve, ‘a . ES a oe os a Neal =: i: see roe : Pe r > Cee ’ OX ° Pal (5°46, O36 $ a TIC) s ed ee AIC) @Q\A4 ee) —) Gauss POAC) ey res) TPL Oke AC -~ Teo aC ern. | Eh ee Th Cte PL ‘SCeO Oe Pv LT ea ae er aca Biase ie OME pit ak ine cack Dia 2k ier Zasshi ask i eer foras. te, Fa aoes i Var ae te : 5) y | sk/ Sed ede De, oe a hora | ere 0 i, ry J "Me, DK > of 6” a a AL a Fie **,,© ee Did mT a EG foliosa, Gr, 5 BU X BAU MIA ul & > ahs One OR 1. 32)} Capsule oblique, membranous Veil de- eh] side, gibbous on the other, with a lid. on one sy Gen. Cuar. Musci. rae, 4 aN CRYPTOGAMIA ts ,@° CaeOo Oa a OAC ON ner nC Leafy Buxbaumia. Capsule nearly sessile, sur- rounded with leaves. Our Je rocks, Sussex, near Tunbridge- Wells. re ey OY CL ate) J, f It grows in little patches on the upright stone, but each plant is separate from the rest, consisting of several erect leaves, the inner ones long-pointed, embracinga solitary nearly sessile capsule, which is oblique, the top pointing upwards; its orifice ; is ciliated with several white permanent teeth. Lid conical, 5 0 “ASS Ca 7S Cee “BeOS ae Ce Me DG Cea “MIS AZ Meare a 5 ase » MMe ee Pe be Pa) bh] iC ay wr ad‘es 495.5 xt We “ Pe Ae FASE ee a Ay) eee mr) iS Che a Ck Fae, with a little constriction in the middle. The veil we have not seen, The obliquity of the capsule forms its most obyious generic character, i 2 specimens of this rare moss were gathered by T. F. Forster, jun. Esq. in September 1794, on the rocks near Hamsil forge (commonly called Harrison’s rocks), and on Eridge ee cen ae 3 Dill, Musc. 253. t. 32. f. 13, i ribus, e a ers Phascum montanum, Huds. Fl. An. 466. P. maximum. Lighif.-Scot. 693, Sphagnum acaulon maximum, foliis in centro cilia- ats ee fase. 2,.20, eae 33. With. Bot. Arr. v. 3.77. Dicks. H. Sice. iC MD Linn. Fil. Meth. Musc. hs t1.f.4. foliosa. ®) Re a | Buxbaumia Cie Syn. J ‘Sj CP 2 , CCN chee oe . oy LBs : oe ey 7 Wl nL & - Stem none, PT SR Spec. Cuar. oy <0) ciduous. Ah MNCCH | 8 ie ee wy ot pp [Pad Sues a ao . n r 6p DC oD ‘ iC : aot EC) . ys Oka Rie 7 6 . at C} 05,8 XG rt a 3) Ca a 2* yA) (s ae DK DKS “yy ] eT at eeneren ee DEG He DKS oD Fey ee a aei. Cha ats ae ai 6°85, D3KG %o, OO pe en aia A ia He HG Ponda. Medak DEES on DIES A Rien OT ie . bs wa Z a a ba 9° "tan S75 eC) : 5 ee "2, | sD aE 1th be dl Wi Sant Pe Ca Vee Tee Ce wd @ 4% OP Ake ie ea ar G°"%,> kf) AL ar ak i a aMaen Se, W MAG4 Bate. * PHASCUM oe oe Phascum. ir] Ww Spec. CHar. Stem none. Capsules on curved stalks. Leaves ovato-lanceolate, acuminated, spreading. Syn. Phascumcurvicollum. Dicks. Crypt. fase. 2.1. With. Bot. Arr.v. 3.73. Relh, Cant. fasc. 3. 8. be ciliated. poe Cuar. Capsule with a lid, the mouth Veil minute, deciduous. Sieh |i A Aa dak a a (la N A5 A ‘Ssio ah] bees G\ Ap ROG Gen. ‘ ee Musci. huey. 6) 4 228 C “so CRYPTOGAMIA OS ie ) ca PaO a Crooked eurvicollum. AF ROL ORNL en BON ‘ee a0 6G » ec) oe lie v4 rv 3530 J though so minute as to be rarely which vary in a short, reddish, curved and recurved stalk, bearing a roundish capsule of the same / rN Z £ The lid ascends obliquely. The veil is more ed its plant should not be esteemed a Bryum, >) we leave though for the present have placed it, at aS 2 ‘ 494.5 se iC A > ifaC) it where the most accurate judges h ~ ‘Ae ¢ AY fe require, nor can we discover any satisfactory reason why this 6, SS co ¢ > F ig ¢ bad least till some more solid generic characters of mosses can be discovered, at, P3 ? ¢ ry Cee ie eae re XK 2 Fa FO) Lea| OLE ee) eC i ee Pi ~ J a av) J a ~~ ABN (5° 905.9) es colour. considerable and permanent than the generic character seems to Os = leaves, . spreading ad pellucid, ‘Cee pointed, breadth, and from the centre of which arises I rae Tit Each plant is simple, with a fibrous root, a few lanceolate, One *on perceived. entire, a ihe Tt and may AP probably be not uncommon, ears it on barren grassy spots a + found It ripens its fruit in April or May, iC bb] aes J >)“ near Croydon. ON Newmarket ; Mr. Dickson 2 eo a} tee OK GATHERED by the Rev. Mr. Hemsted ona dry bank near P Cs SE Wellies | PL Sees A Pa a ee eC oe Mae | ws rae . Riera Sie aie De ia hee eS “ee aay EN Pe) 14SEC7% Oe*e, PUP a Hid bile dab. — et a7} te » @ f« be MO > , aL DEC tee DHE Gite, ee 8 Cte Od OE ane late a) iia thaakehi Brac k Binet ak Miter ik iiaacaaa ‘ ro cy a aC. te Sk . La se ° ry J) Mw Mh eeeFea CY & , A ep oS oN ok , MAS } a ‘20 , &) rn = @\Ag Pat a ema) " 0 \ 4 ‘ ee \ eT a L9 P< my oe5s EIT Lhe Ss ¢ =O SA’ A \ > seed © ‘ ak JW Xs os ay, »2 u8 : i ee 6 Annoe fe e CAE <gn* a r y—¥ Ki ’ X Ey Pr See _ Ly. LT Pe cd at) re of? ‘aOthe.” CreQe » 4 f . ) | V I B Mealy U RN UM Lantana. . Guelder-rose, ; ul I . oy yy or Way-faring Tree. J Ox. ee pee GAZ J C I SEF aS mat) Xd Ae rye ae as ea Alia ds ae ii a nae a ———— rae old 7 ~ BM 104. aii Syn. 460. RSC M PO ies ala FO aes Szbth. Viburnum. a Se Trigynia. or PENTANDRIA Gen. Cuar. Cal. superior, of five leaves. Cor. in five segments. Berry with one seed. Spec. CHar. Leaves heart-shaped, serrated, veiny, downy beneath. Syn. Viburnum Lantana. Linn. Sp. Pl. 334. Huds. Fi. An. 129. With. Bot. Arr. 318. Relh. Cant. 126. Dy - Oe bi A) es a LOW q ThCe- of, PR Ce ed | FCM ee oe B Cir tad Sg AG ie to I O14 as in the whole e genus, é 2 at ww somewhat 3 on ellip: tical, heart-shaped at the base, obtuse, serrated, strongly veined, >) i ia without stipulze. aE : yellowish antheree. Berries compressed. le C red on the ¥, ae Flowers in large terminal cymes, white, with aed ayer ahart ane iol Stigmas sessile, very short and thick. When young (as in our figure) they ci. outermost J side, yellow on the other; bu > toed quite ripe they turn black. They have a little mealy astrings io pulp. Seed laree, flat and furrowed. Cee: ys Dee This is supposed to be the Vilurnum of Virgil; but the poet . <s ao SILy i fe. says nothing by which only in his 1st eclocue,. ° it can be ver. 26. ascertained, os ha od it4 mentioning "9 G \ a) ow aad) A a Chhe f, . APO “iy s od SS er) ee rae) ry aC) WG Pa dee eG The leaves turn dark red in autumn. e >) ee ad . the The 4p pd ee aT aie SoE on E gt IE eee he Cee aD, as is found FO SO leaves are opposite, Co Copr pubescence backs, and even upper sides of the leaves. ay same kind of tufted stellated flower-stalks, ayy | bY | Bas , GC Me 1 — 4 . a7 . >) OY ce > re U eile dthe dete oe bd Le ' mT oe % i oa 695. ? ; i Ray mentions this shrub as growing in a clay soil. We have observed it most plentifully, and apparently in its true wild situation, in chalky places, as about Henley, Oxfordshire; not but that it occurs also.here and there in the woods and hedges of most parts of England, flowering in May. It is‘'a thickly-branched shrub or small tree, growing to a larger size in the north of England (as Ray also remarks) than in the south; its twigs round, pliant, and mealy, with the u :1 CCl ehea 7) yES 5 § ; ao Weigle. ; SS bers Ch = A Nha frty are) S eC) a0 Cie no at G PL sf had aC4 v 8 eras {Sarg eS ae 0/43 a ‘ iN : ER es a eh (e ie) f ; 4 2 Ah) kOe m7 & Ce bj ae OR ds Tee SRL, ACP e¢ Cee Ai aan Dy sk Cae / 7 A DKC Chk POR CP ar Ree DG 7 CY Pe SerP Me DRG Cher her Oat Por Ale OES Aaa #P , Me eHRE = pas DFEG te a“ ENO RG tec) . eet sy rn ” _ Si Chet POL S*; OM OL Ci 5 iat Chee ack is ie ik fi y sel Cte ee lie . x Ca era ies a Pe " SO eT ave ee a A ee a a ee Sh %s/ by @a, sy Bt St Paes Sry me Md oO ba a A: or Water r-2 ‘ AC St Elder. Viburnum NY AZ 7 eS od oe es : LO) Van’ SB Ly ae, 2cs a> e ‘ . ° a 3 rat } petal, without each consisting merely of a large irregular flat together. close organs of fructification. Stigmas nearly sessile, Seed flat, heart-shaped. A Oh ee *s ma) ad PLY iC LR een 206 G*%, RZ1 > Os, Aa —] d Re aes oe ot ae ea ia PhD, Cee a [> of de) i Cle NEF : ae (* a: Se at D ter , >“4 a6 Pa “5.02 Tt . hove eee 0) ane Berries drooping, very succulent. >) a $s Clie RT Pe, Oi 2 — SL: od sclaa yet In gardens the Guelder-rose, bearing round bunches of abortive flowers only, is very common, elegantly erouping with the Lilac and Laburnum in the early part of summer. Leaves It is a small bushy tree, smooth in all its parts. ks foot-stal with three great, unequa lly serrated, lobes; their or pair a and top, the towards bearing several cup-like glands two of erect linear append ages, scarcely to be called stipule, Cymes of many white flowers; the perfect near the base. ones small, resembling eld er; abortive ones in the margin, he mostly American, the leaves of which turn red in autumn. 7 2 ae c <r oon asecete, Tuts shrub is common in woods and hedges in watery ripen places, flowering early in June; the bright-red berties leaves the October of middle the towards and , September about assume a beautiful pink-colour, affording another instance, in addition to that of the Cornel (sce tab. 249), of a genus, PT i es Ctaed Tov, DsleGe*ey, v > R o> Ly t ‘ y Crd 64) Sibth. Ox. 104. Opulus. Rai Syn. 460. AF “ay AN NWR | 7 AAR \\ > 130. Huds. Fi. Linn. Sp. Pl. 384. Reth. Cant. 127. With. Bot. Arr. 318. at) j . > Wes An: Opulus. al OIE Syn. $) 6%, ad HANI glands. Pe their foot-stalks set with Oa ray iC Leaves lobed; ra | Cuar. Cor. in five Berry with one seed. 2 Spec. Cal. superior, of five leaves. eS a Raat segments. == Gren. Cuar. Trigynia. = PENTANDRIA A ic EL Te ~—_ f ; ; 7 { Guelder-rose, ey Common Opulus. ae VIBURNUM 8 DK ee) Cte eT lk Ai e Rie Ale ee rei ke Ni Py Melis ~~ eas M6, tea Dita oe 1 a ° cen] ; eT EB ee A a) MOACCH ALA 10 eS Be RO PA FN aa AORrae OL A ACO A LOR a RSET dog DR ChetDi ORME ta MaOCR /2ts CLO NF peed PO atc Mata erases ies ee 3S Acar gel| POORe RE A = *~ SE CM hi Ce bn ROEEle Ck eksur Le aD OEWy BL OME Ci aa OR OS OC tn aa i Rc Che, ey ne ee a awe %4. =) “aye Pra ee a a a) es 2 < he a A eM, Sy, wy St4 7 * tw rn ©5, eee STONY Io stg Ml eae G°%,9) ae) vem Yee Ce pe | lg nae on the a a OM by) x RT Cr et cy north rec cede wild specimens Aug. 10, 1795. This very rare a it it The true E. verrucosa of Linneus is hitherto misunderstood. a perfectly distinct species, found in the south of Europe, with very hairy involucra and capsules. His stricta, though so well described in the 10th edition of Syst. Nat. was afterw ards omitted by Linnzeus, and confounded (as his her! barium shows) with verrucosa: ‘The specimen there preserve d,|, being trom the Levant, . ek) “SREP Se MG er | Relhan Eversden wood, Cambridgeshire, from whom we i Va ry wr y eb) aS Mr. is more luxuriant than ours, so that the secon d divi- AP Rev. ya the oR NOL Cie OE, 1 hes SOL eee Founp | by = J ¥ ¥ begun the ae. by {X® 9 Ss Ours root. appears to be annual, ha iving a very sma all fibrous Whole herb destitute of hairiness. Stem simple, erect, round, aad purplish. Leaves lanceolate, varying in breadth, entire, Ge- ifTy 6 somewhat contracted, towards the base, serrated ‘above. neral involucra ovate; partial heart-s sh aped 3 aall serrated. Petals Germen clothed with tubercles, which round, entire, yellow. Sty sles permaas the fruit ripens hecome iseacraaise prickles. 6 Fy e nent, cloyen, united half their length mto one. ; Pa , we Pe S DREGE, re “8 ~ > - 4 ph ey Che him) to have A with NE the case taking this English plant for the Tithymalus verrucosus of John Bauhin, a species with a creeping ng root. * ¢ id seldom 4 a 6,%. be Ae Py ¥: Cee sions of the umbel are Soy three together. ‘Phe synonyms of the verrucosa are in all authors so excessivvely confused, that Ray seems | (which 1S wecan answer for none oa the above. rN7 7) —<- VN Se 186. be Cant. Tithymalus verrucosus. t-) Relh. dake 3) be YL without hairs. Syn. Euphorbia stricta. Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 1049. With. Bot. Arr. Muds. Fl. An. 209. E. verrucosa. 497. ‘¢ee lanceolate, Fruit warty, ma) e. Leaves smooth. ey hs dl ba nearly ovate. at the base, DEG Pe, ORG 04D Lis Pedal entire Se serrated, SOR CRAnL Gen. Cuar. Cor. of 3 or 4 petals, standing on the calyx. Cal. of one leaf, inflated. Caps. 3-lobed. Spec. Cuar. Umbel of 4or 5 rays, 3-cleft and cloven. Partial involucra | RO Trigynia. aa ee DODECANDRIA . ce EUPHORBIA stricta. Upright warty Spurge. ra 5)" te a ee 3, > aC ee ea e > ome ee Ah ee hes } oieig Ap) Oh * Tan ha Dae Or PY POT EMRE er Or ba | PE ae Te Pe ae re)Oe a oe) OS a6 Greece SEC, “A sk ee OD Le awe shane xeare) i ‘ha'c “DK tc Jie hk Gt, De ae a . ; hes Lack Bihan Aik ies aah ae a ROO CML ee le Oh OL IG OR ae er cdok. Waersoke CB 3 Ca entaike be OL ae a Daa eee ¢ eo a wv A Be Tia) —— oY lh "Se,/ Vat aC) a ea os ee a 7 A HMA Ped* rf 4 €¢ B 2 SC 9 Ar men CVn. r oe "7 He ie aN ar te > \ dea . 6\ ’ 4 a /* ae : CAA ES gia< A dece G4 \ : 7°%, cen S\MA a a Oe, S)S4/ G27 773 s a, tei ‘- ¥, se . ‘ tn q >| re a o € LP rma P be e pe apie % re”lt. [™ mite TT ttle Cs, Javin BAe i “e.ate ms Wd od at c m *)> ie é a | Vi i hy * 0 art#2 ae NA ORI eo a 05D ie r L VIiCLA —~ XK 6, ae Sah a } 1 es | CH i Pes) = Se o ru ele ‘ aeAe ORNL Cee oie aa cd sativa. Spec. Cuar. Oe 2 transversely bearded on the lower Caen A Stigma Pods sessile, nearly upright, generally in En ae Gen. Cuar. side. Decandria. no PaaS toe DIADELPHIA EKG or amr . > Common Vetch. PEL OTT Cte One LCRa Pe er pairs. Lower leaves blunt. Stipulz marked with a discoloured depression on the under side. Syn. Vicia sativa. Linn. Sp. Pl. 1037. Huds. Fl. An. Relh. Cant, 274. Wiih. Bot. Arr. 776. 318. SLOPE OO ee Rai Syn. 320. *¢,®) "ay I Sibth. Ox. 224. Vicia, rN aati ta of the common Vicia sativa, so Cake PACE aid F 4 NO aro mr CRO CuROE ch RON MOS ey nan ee called because it is cultivated as an early fodder for cattle in various parts of Europe, and the seeds are the food of pigeons. It varies much in size, and in the form as well as breadth of the leaves, which are sometimes inversely heart-shaped, sometimes It is (at least the upper ones) of an elliptic-lanceolate form. easily known by the depressed mark on the stipulz, which looks black to as if made with a hot iron, and varies in colour from weak, Stems annual. is root The yellow. brown, and even to for cling to nothing with meet tendrils the if nt procumbe footcommon the support, angular and furrowed, as are also purple. elegant of shades in Flowers stalks of the leaves. cylindrical—the flowers deep red.’ Its pods are erect, black, We NZ J ‘i agreed to be a variety of the sativa. have received it from bs RCE ICE The pods are more generally horizontal than erect. 1s generally Mr. Hudson’s variety 6 of his V7. lathyroides ee, Lya i> ‘Ch EN P ea Wis ‘ (Cha Me er 'o °bd)aed oe | le ok ot > ios4 a Od is a lie Cullum. The « of V. laWeymouth by favour of Sir Thomas common variety of samore the thyroides Huds. seems to be synonyms are not very their but ; g Witherin in tiva mentioned easily to be ascertained, Pe is a wild specimen Tuts =a . i de ke S \ rT cy ar re AC) Sa tet bd EE antl aD ay FO ber ear ma ee aie oh OKC a as . : oh Cy ae Pa Ped Phe ia ines Bas fe % wr ; Ohta ~ ie cee ra a Tah: ee ro neIG Li v) ee bast t eee CR a a a Oi eg ee)DE As(g PR) a ts %¢ navn ee ac A Dis ok A Bihhe Cy A eoere ( “ En ae } eck line atk ae A} CFM Neer Ce - ’ eAe ae OS Nk a Seas KG ee etl Te.nate Bn ead OL A a eg ee AC “eS oY bE oa Prey eas ead ad PaO ee a a AS ag vo Pt MSD . ay ae a ST en ak Mine bddddda dda LA 8e. ’ BM| ermen S)\ vel hPa . Mag, Jee OM, | aE At GMA. = See S Sen Ped ok Pee Pn, )FE(e IS eSPe yo, a ad Hep Nelo, ~ COsPo ; Peat) ? ad ; et iti yp ¢ , Be Le ae i ; Cite ha” = “aye % , Lita cr “eh ae aA PN ne i pl Pd PS NdOa : ed ila)UT olval OWPuen rae COS ad [>> — Con) —" es, rw aA Lake ff OL Chee Cte ee ON cae oe rar oy HAYoe rae a re C; 2 e OE i ahieteng) eg read + as Be) > y \Y ff Z Rough Cock’s-foot Grass. / 7 : > eo Pe ms OE Cia /// lage. > eet TRIANDRIA Oe tas a Mie og hee / | / é VWhe / tic it: , € Ge Calg Mi’), pp Gen. i if Hl Se Yt Here < V7 IS * Y, MN Cal. of 2 valves, compressed; Cuar. larger, and carinated. one valve e Spec. CHar. Panicle crowded, leaning one way. Syn. Dactylis glomerata.. Linn. Sp. Pl. 105. Huds. Fi, With. Bot. Arr. 94, Relh. Cant. 39. An. 43. Sibth. Ox. 43. EB Pal 7 Gs P ; % ; Digyma. Gramen asperum. 2 aii Syn. 400. , 3 a>) 73 1 3 6 rP Py eF oO) Rhyl %s. a Ps ahd at “ly! 6\.h2 4° rs C hf hue Ee ; u{ Nace 29a, — SAS ee a i” rae - ie CY : PT) Pers 106 Bibl bon "VGC Mol shed ay 7 Vowroly dord orn PL Chi eS Cae re ee OR from June to August. florets, long filaments. Each calyx contains three, four, or more It flowers with both petals pointed, and one shortly awned. é a ao MEME Od RS Chee Py ao) Stipula bifid, or torn. Stems two feet high, rough, leafy, terminating in a sort of pyramidal branched pa~ nicle, consisting of several thick tufts of flowers all leaning one The lower way, by which it may be readily distinguished. branches of the panicle are much divaricated, and sometames on Anthere reddish, hanging out of the flower compound. eu harsh and rough. fd i>Ft be od PY 2 Chee es 2 ras FY we not eaten by cows (according to the experiments of Linnzus), nor much preferred by other domestic animals. Root strong and perennial. Leaves dark green, carinated, 2) ayRIE Oars drippings of trees, and thence sometimes (as Dr. Withering It is a harsh coarse grass, mentions) called Orchard Grass. ij PN re One of the most common of all grasses, in pastures, hedges, thickets, &c. remarkable for thriving under the shade and AC Att Va\otsh Se ee * . Oe OMAor ices i NE Ca LY Ie = Ni glomerata. DEC ES LIS. DACTY Y Na 289 99 Pw adN) AN 6 We a K\ Vege \ 6) NZ 228 fis Hs iN MeL a haan Ce D 3K" 86 ; = DKS Nia ee aaa ti TIC ea) Ce ty EC) Med CYOe SL ae, NN eC) One 20. Die FChee Pe Le hy Greeee, *s, ©.© Se/S0e, 676 Pe wan aaas De eee toy r wrx a aes| 2) BRK | sure Ce Peo L MN At $e DSK Gt I Cad Bia Sere Pe D5KG TP ren see RP Oe Mo nk ire ra Bie cook ine Ha, DSK P54, DHE ak Mie cacak Bi 0.) 5K (5 lag DIG Me (My, DHE. Sk lies hh Dihnachashlitiencthiititasdaaiad 9 D5 CaN oC parry ee a a a) > a we « sy Pd 5 iia ia Fed a =, < i Wie] lo we ee i. “Sestcr ris “Se, anv Pre sore 4 “es en Py Aye *I75-(4 ®.. KS ge Oe ya oh) OMe eS wae, Avie P T HARA BORO nO en MO AOR Common — MONANDRIA CBee. rim +] 1 ie ME OBIT F356 vulgaris. Chara. nme Monogynia. CMe aL Ch a) > od iy oF CS a apecmphianaar’ 6 Common in muddy stagnant ditches, flowering in July. The root is presumed to be annual. The herb floats under water, and is harsh to the touch, feetid; very brittle and gritty when dry. Stems branched, striated, rough, but destitute of ot — 3 6 IE pM, Cae, TO Var) 6 above, not jointed. Syn. Chara vulgaris. Linn. Sp. Pl. 1624. Huds. Fl.An. 397. With. Bot. Arr. 1015. Relh. Cant. 345. Sibth. Ox. 1. Gaertn. Sem. v. 2. t. 84. c. vulgaris foetida. Raii Syn. 132. Re Stem and leaves rough, striated, without Leaves and leaflets tapering, channelled AS ahd read) ary Spec. CHar. prickles. oD Gen. Cuar. Cal. none. Cor. none. Anthera sessile. Style none. erry with many seeds. Ee Cd TIC prickles. Leaves six or eight in a whorl, as long as the joints of the stem, and of the same texture, awl-shaped, narrow, ey) a ie ote xe Cee cD @ *y,,5> Sometimes unaccompanied by any germen), red or yellowish, in decay cracking into several angular portions. Germen ovate, yellow or whitish, spirally striated, and crowned with five little ay ? vy a a ,, ee ee pointed, channelled above; the lower ones simple; the others bearing on their upper sides rows of erect leaflets, four in a cluster, among which the flowers are placed, and these leaflets are by Linneeus and Jussieu described as the calyx. The analogy of Hippuris, to which (as Dr. Stokes and the most intelligent systematic writers have observed) this genus is nearly allied, makes us conceive the flower to be really a naked one. The anthera is solitary, sitting at the base of the germen (or F Cat leaves. Fruit with a hard shell. Seeds imbedded inareddish pulp. _ It will easily be perceived how naturally this genus comes Pas anthera and germen, and ys Chee Cee BE GCua Nor Cum é Ox the « C ae ‘between also that the five leaves which crown the germen are not (as has been supposed) the stigma, but the tips of a five-leaved calyx closely enfolding that part in a spiral manner. This merits a further inquiry. CS a tine communication 3 Gy rN impregnation may be performed within the stem by a clandes- r ee i er rs LO) RO Into Monandria Monogynia next to Hippuris. As it flowers under water, no wonder if the nature of its anthera and pollen € obscure ; but we cannot with Geertner (see his preface, P- 33.) doubt the part we have described to be the anthera. _ It isthe opinion of our ingenious friend Mr. Correa, that the Cy r>) cra re P ory) rm ee A . ee a ee 7 oe ee " a oe Ee) ory %. is 7) pes a oy Pa a ; EG Rt D ae ve NO sucts Ae Fe AO ae, AC SL AC) er Bre #65 D546 POC es Bart er we Cha eo Meera ped . is PK U ve TES Minas MA + DC ee -y DEG te UE v Oe OE DAG “ ast tao C0, DSK (s Cae DIS ie 2 86, DEK Go. Ah Dish ie toe - eta Monae. : Ber sk / Oe ee a a Me DKS Mins Ak Bk 2 De PN) Cie oe "Sen7 ASS | a ns re. io cea) ~ € ec 7, ae nies) 5 by P } 1 eV -— PCR b ERS * pak | a 5 ii i a , OT ~ af : iba " J ’ ck aed PO ih v4 4 @ ae Rar ie s ato CMa ey e ive F ac mere han oe . ve Cae) on fl a) >. 4 D L# ~ ve a Ps fern KK FS \) { \ 6, xq « of No 2 cA. ) as SORBUS “_ a = TN Dey 7 aucuparia, Mountain Afb, or Quicken Tree. Cal. in 5 fegments. Petals 5. Berry ¢ Lt CRPit ieee Gen. Cuar. Trigynia. aa] ICOSANDRIA SEF See 3 Ca % RO OO) ee Ls & a es ee,A he > AC Oe 7 Fl. An. 213, Linn. Sp. Pl. 683. With. Bot. Arr. 513. Hud/. Relb, Cant, 190. S. fylveftris, foliis domeftice fimilis, Rai Syn. 452. > SO Leaves pinnated, fmooth on both fides, Sorbus aucuparia. eae eke TO RD Cie af to ts Spec. Cuan, Syn. ore <Ohad inferior, with 3 feeds. x “ a x ‘ - them in the Highlands with fugar. ce ie” ONS Cr ree SS Cie Se ae OE a a - Sa SE Ss AP * CNY ae Ck ie ral fee rs J IC) 7 eR op ijk Pr — ~ hs 9, Ses Cea %9g DF 70) PEG 4 DAE 9, DEC Tr HIS elegant tree grows very abundantly in mountainous (not alpine) woods, efpecially in the northern counties, and is now indeed pretty generally difperfed through the kingdom, having been fo very frequently planted about houfes for orna~ ment. The flowers appear in May, and the berries ripen in September. It is of flow growth; the wood tough and clofe-grained, not very hard; bark fmooth, greyifh. Leaves winged; their leaflets ferrated, entire at the bafe, fmooth above, and nearly fo beneath, except a few fine fcattered hairs, and their under fide is alfo glaucous. The flowers are white, in large terminal corymbi. Petals very concave. Germen hairy; ftyles 3, Berries fometimes 4, the feeds anfwering to them in number. bright red, very juicy, acid aftringent and bitter, {carcely eatable when raw, though a not unpleafant jelly is prepared from eh Be A od Gt a J) * ny Ad *t., Oe VEC a aE ll ‘~, AE FP A CR a P st a n@bs On aval) a A , Lo 5 a0)ALE PRT te ROL Ie IC OR a TU Pro i AR bd Feces PR as <le at Oe en L) ed Naa A Mu Pea NO % Bik M aS 77 Py KMe, ee tee cv inn i DKG a al 2 A) 4 z » i Midas es Ms ¥ ed “i me as Oe aD u a OR Ae v Te ak Bie ee Be at ei . P Pe Ah “Wins ‘ * Es oe Te "te, DK The a ic Miah 3 S54. DG > als DO ai sknt Mhan sak Ohi ROE ce DIGS (5 dios Cag eS Oy OC te e ee Pe Ree) Che Pe *ee/t S a % soe Reh OS lain ¢ = Se DAES rn tee POP = ys ee ie i RD eat Fe a es Ps, eo ile ee Pet aS See AS S46. J7N9 alt Pt rae Pon iO ee gk Receptacle downy. ,0¢ Seed-down fcales roundifh and “6 Rai Syn. 190. but rifing when the flowers appear, branched, and clothed with alternate, more feffile, and lefs compound leaves, the up- 3) ° Py permoft being perfectly fimple. are linear, more or Branches beneath. drooping flowers on {mall fimple leaf. this and fome other 6 F a ats aS te C a rs ee Ts Ce lefs clothed with clofe-preffed filky hairs forming long fimple racemes of {mall flender foot-ftalks, each accompanied by a The receptacle, as Linnzus obferves, in fpecies, is naked, and not downy. ; < Oh os a Pe eat ed Cte J ¢ se 06 Tens SOs ee PN ee, of) Pm. The fegments of all the leaves ~~ FS ao Le & eNO ce hd RL i ae i The whole herb is without fmell, and flowers in Augutt. Root perennial, producing the firft year a number of long{talked pinnated and deeply divided leaves, fpreading flat-on the ground in the form of a ftar; from the centre of which the ftem comes out the fummer following, proftrate at firft, ee Ce A lum, Bart. 20 he | é ee aoe field fouthernwood has hitherto been found in no Tue part of England but about Thetford, where it was difcovered in Ray’s time, and ftill grows by the fide of the great road about a mile from that town in the way to Norwich, and alfo on Icklingham heath, eight miles from Bury, from whence the wild {pecimen here delineated was fent by Sir Thomas Cul- nA Bie Pa av Abrotanum campeftre. (Wa 1185: Artemifia campeftris. Linn. Sp. Pl. Hudf. Fl. An. 357. With. Bot. Arr. 889. a P| Syn. wr el ‘ Stems a) Flowers of the radius without a corolla. Spec. Cuar. Leaves in many linear fegments. procumbent before flowering, wand-like. ' 8 flightly Cal. imbricated, the ae) a Cuar. too? a Gen. Polygamia-fuperflua. G44 % si2p°%@, 4 rad ‘ mo rasa SYNGENESIA_ PL ye Ee 20) tT Ln ROE OR eS Seu Cr SHG Field Southernwood. clofed. » campeftris. “Sh DEG Sane = epee ere ncn *s ARTEMISIA none. ‘<> (2 ke L389 oe Be Oh RL Cs at) Bia + a ~ ; ve oa a ov ee ST) pe I ie es J a) 7} - er 4 $G bp Soa Cee PAL A SS : aL Re OAC *a Che6 PO ay i Fy @\2u 7°s AO ; PNP Rte Re PL ACM ACR | Sa, ee eek Fat) PL [Vy Bee ‘ Na Chal hor Bin see Oe G wm | 5 6°, OD Ob. Feeney We a aiioh Rati v, ‘ DG ee mE Ca < G aDhiba m4 em OR kM a ead , Be DHS ine u, m ee) DEG ca pe rae) at "%s ING ~ als eee Py 4 a) a rs Pe ol: ee ROE eel ee = i ar Je ag Sa ey *alete *ty e e) % s oe. cE An A Kr. - ie a Ps 7 7 a8 pra - on at) ai Pte ores, aks : he eae rasa a) i ~ af y if + ia * NE AAG) eT) a] fe an . EG a0) ‘Se PEE c ae PRL yi Monogynia. none, Afparagus officinalis. Linn. Sp. Pi. 448, Fl, An. 145. With. Bot. Arr. 352. Afparagus. Rau Syn, 267. Hudy, “try red, fometimes in a poor foil perfeéting but one feed in each cell, 20 4's "Sac a2 My DGG 724 Ej) 7S Pes C ry na) ae ae tLENE ae nee 20g bd ea r~S ry ee ses OAL ee ry c 4%, a “4 PRD, ABs ©n capillary fimple ftalks, drooping. Not finding their inner “gments reflexed, as the generic character of Linnzus requires, we have altered that character. ‘The flowers appear tmaphrodite, though in fome the ftamina, in others the putillum, are occafionally abortive. Style deeply 3-cleft. © Pa narrow and briftly, but folitary, membranous, and jagged. We have the inner ftipule menaxillz of the branches, Ns Obie SEL Lee AY oe. rs " Oe Ce ee re Oe Ve ee had ta. an) ” beel . * eee a) eat bs oe without leaves below, in the upper part branching ina panicled alternate manner. Leaves in tufts, very flexible, not rigid or fpinous. Stipulz triangular, acute, the upper ones ovate never (as Dr. Stokes alfo remarks) found tioned by Linnzus. Flowers from the #99, O56, as in moft of this natural order. Stem erect, occafionally procumbent, round, fimple, and bearing alternate fcales (or f{tipulz 38 Fw perfons would fuppofe the diminutive herb before us to be the origin of our luxuriant garden Afparagus, commonly called Sparrow-grafs, and very vulgarly Gra/s. It grows wild in maritime places in the fouth of England, abundantly on the pebbly beach oppofite the ferry going from Weymouth to Portland Ifland, from whence we received it by favour of A.B. Lambert, Efg. flowering in Auguft. Root perennial, creeping, with very long thick fimple fibres, we ry Syn. Da Spines S\ flexible. PAG) Stem herbaceous, generally ere, round. Leaves briftle-fhaped, Stipulze folitary. AR Spec. Cyar. Berry 2°o Gen. Cuar. Cor,'in 6 fegments, ered, inferior. of 3 cells, with 2 feeds in each. Chee Re rN IS Or = - eS eee Common Afparagus. HEXANDRIA OY officinalis. aes eR RL ASPARAGUS PSN a0 ES te 2 eC ry %eo. DSK a) p MT Lh AC eg / ah EC) r] yo 66 DKS ry ta se : i a x it PLY IG LAMM AMddAdad add xy DSS FAS % ee ee CAO | AC res Ct . ‘ Ie) *ty, Oo nat LCM TAL Cae ed PCa. oie CL ee ack Marca Bae cock Mat ask Met sacsk inet cask lites ick itescakliiancaiak tiie ee LJ fd a a 4 Ce ae a eC! Saal vie ae rz at) 7 = es Five f) a eA Ee _. i 1.44 a (5G Cha We ~*~ ie i Sp ne) Mid Lf ww as Si ie oe aay i.) Ni Sed or a re ie eo bed. lee a es) C “ti, Pe eT SBA a Poy sg - ee a : ia | * , luna) ae ¥a bn ee Ce ea od tivin “ 0 . ies “esdtrlo Soc a7 sone P Pa a, eee Mt 7\ Ce ~ Paes Dy PO, SIALG Waa VE ts a f on 5 a BRIZA_ sd] media, HY ] al ‘Che [ 340 DGS ey, Nie OE ORNL Ri ) EN H % oY ia | ra 7 ve 7 ES DHS Common Quaking-Grafs, or Cow-Quakes. fpikes iar ovate. Calyx Seed Little fhorter mal Cuar. BIS ai s Spec. & b] S >4 aS Gen. Cuan. Cal. of 2 valves, with many flowers; the little fpike two-ranked, its valves heart-fhaped, obtufe, the innermoft fmaller. Fl. Ruf. + Gramen tremulum. La SC) a Dick. H. Rau Syn. 412. “ il é or lefs zigzag, that the fpikes, bart » a ) le ad Q na) circumftance, as well as their elegant form and fhining brown Oe 4 /, he colour, they excite the admiration of the moft incurious. The calyx is generally of a darker colour than the floral valves, but like them in fhape; the florets are about 7, in two ranks, fo Het * Ss) "ta, vs Le we,raat} rk ie ) a Fk Ones BA "1y a Jae, tm Or ’Ae ‘ Cte . 7 Oe, that the {pike is much compreffed, and of a broad ovate figure. SH ae J more Cee Pe, and PRL flender, which hang drooping from their extremities, tremble at the leaft breath of air or other caufe of agitation; from which Ch a . tremely 2 the ra in graffes, a as ufual fheaths of which laft are very long, the ftipules very fhort, blunt, and entire, Branches of the panicle purplith, {preading, the lowermoft in pairs, the others alternate, all fo ex- aC hee Te) Leaves moftly at the root, each joint of the ftem ’ with one from he one or two joints near the bottom. le aCe \ ERY common in paftures, where, as Profeflor Martyn obferves, it is made into hay with other graffes, but never cultivated alone for any particular purpofe. The roots are perennial, and the flowers appear in May. Root fibrous. Straw upright, from 6 to 18 inches, moft commonly about a foot, in height, round, very {mooth, with EC ee) a. ‘\ "Mge. 4 Aye mt MACCH . :| t. 39. eas BIT eM, Mart. ice. falc. 5. 2. Dia Meee, Sibth. Ox. 43. > =i Briza media. Lim. Sp. Pl. 103. Hudf. Fi. An. 38. With, Bot. Arr: 92. Relb. Cant. 38. cy we DGD Syn. Oe aan than the florets, which are about 7 in number. " } Digynia. tr Obes CRO enen TRIANDRIA tee! aang dee) ACh & af, Chad oa Pex Oak , OePy eek) eS PR COM ag cl I al b a tank Mik ite ek ioeaah lite Ade Fe ste Md ok da —— Hid EN % a Oi Aine Le) ne FM el Or VeCr Nee 4 ae PO lhe af OREO OME Cite ed tan ax Beas Masashi 2 oF AOR nk, CM ea ask Masi : me *\si207* a, Ct oa ti e iacaa iat eae ce i vl ae = iar) es ee aC) ae ee ee Sec san le 8a. 7 Te Se PS ak on eo RI Poe Ora sAeKis AAD Cl ba a rs ¢ Kn racts at) ay, CR ek ie) ale 2 perlatus. . “ 7 OUND PPL aL fubtus Dill. Mufc. 147.t. 20.f. 39. Smith's nigrum ¢t on the trunks of trees, old park pales, &c. ‘very Lichens in frequently, but it is one of the moft rare of all gathered in fructification. Our {pecimen in that ftate was one we ever Cardiganfhire laft fummer, and is the only Britifh faw. hand, not The fronds fpread into patches about as broad as the quite loofe very firmly attached in any part, and the margin 1s and generally erect. ‘Their upper furface is of a greyifh the margin is {mooth, and chefnut-coloured, beneath. the centre of The more elevated parts of the frond, efpecially in tubercles, each patch, are bordered with roundifh grey mealy which this fpecies is compared by Dillenius to pearls, by , and fome effentially diftinguifhed from L. faxatilis, glaucus Shields a little elevated, cup-fhaped, conothers near it. browner when cave; their difk of a greenifh olive when wet, y, crenate and dry; their margin inflexed, grey,ing powder the hairs of the under lobed. Dillenius errs in defcrib furface as not branched. cy 4 ¥ Ww i . Ce) ed) m4 4f yrs a ” ie ei Ma} To >) aA ea er times hairs, which i ieee fometimes projeét beyond the margin RAs : though a like a fringe ; at other clothed with fhort black rigid branched or forked BE mr — sy oe “ ? SRS, IHG ee, ? 5 te he in ea ye ack Ri ed Age| A Mi r bs iC a, ke + ; moiftened, {mooth, little. pitted; fometimes ‘ndeed it becomes fprinkled with black hairs. mealy cracks and tubercles intermixed with fhort partly fhining, and fmooth partly black, very is fide The under MOT white, greenifh when very much 93 SO ~ oy GC **s, PaaS 4 err Cia b rea) Sibth. Ox. 330. Relb. Cant. 434. Tour, v. 1.225. 260. Lichenoides glaucum perlatum, ra 208, Chie is Cine CMa or a Bie WK G beEO Shields on fhort footwith powdery tubercles. ftalks, olive-coloured, concave, with a crenate powdery inflexed margin. Lichen perlatus, Linn. Sy/t. Nat. ed, 12, V. 2. Syn. Hudf. Fl. An. 543. With. Bot. Arr. v. 3. 412. ry id Leafy, creeping, lobed; grey and Cuar. black and hairy below; ‘bordered above; {mooth es) Spec. cirrofum. a Ale, L pte CRYPTOGAMIA Male, fcattered warts. Gen. Cuar. Female, fmooth fhields or tubercles, in which the feeds are imbedded. 94. aEE CE TT Ln ET Pearly Lichen. a rat ue wy Ge LICHEN Ns oe Po ov y | CoP a Pe es 1 y al ad Maes Met a a “ edie mete ee gee Pe ~ Pee PE a Ps *o. Dots 4 ae ee ee AC) aT ‘ Oa nor SMe ro TR . Re Fr aa Rte a) a SF) COM Ce ~ 4? a RA i ad + Ck ke " ACs Tk i te tO toe 4 ORNL SAA ihe Lag sk Bihan loo heer zak a Bi OM OL Clin Yer i a : ry i sh OR Pa, OF tana o 7! ai te . ar RV Ae) . ar] a as ci feet Lo! be ry st “Vv 44 >) a Tk ye re Vat. a ee PO 4b Pee » st oC ee YP Pad Vd ee aC i hd > KJ pee STE MS oe,fe Stalk long, fimple, upright, BC) ES Py 2 A A 2rs a wx Cie in decay, difcharging great plenty of an impalpa powder, which is the feed. lower in his Flora Suecica rightly afferts, that if the ftalk be moiftened, the capfule turns one way, and Arr. if the upper half (not as erroneoully tranflated in the inBot.a con” the head, or capfule) receives trary direction. the moifture, it turns — ce ay ri) Ww aad ry COO RL C re at - iN POE he eG ee ly RD 7 *@ she a, aC or > and rugofe pale-brown Linnzeus half of the an ry purple, rds the veil falls point is bent to one fide, and foon afterwa The capfule turns yellow in ripening5 brown to the ground. ble a @)s i— \) ee AA 2 then oP oe co yellow, definition. ly penits {ummit incurved and bearing a pear-fhaped oblique a yellowith dent capfule, which is green when unripe, with ointed veil blunt lid, and enfolded in a long, flender, fharp-p lower part with feveral angles (not always exactly four), the g capfule, the of which becoming ftretched by the {wellin Chee ee 007;a very fhort, Re5 a or 9 none, ee Stem cr downy. 6) fimple, OAC) long, Roots d leaves, bearing a few broad, ovate, entire, acute, pelluci as to {fo curved in and colle€ted together by their points us’s Dilleni to ng accordi were, it as bulb or ball, little a form de and neFE. xrremey common on moift garden walks ng its gleted flower-pots, wafte ground, heaths, &c. produci tly. capfules in the {pring and early part of fummer abundan T B. bulbiforme aureum, calyptra quadrangulari, capfulis piriformibus nutantibus. Dill. Mujfc. 407. t. 52.f- 75: iS OL bP) Sibth. Ox. 288. Bryum aureum, capitulis reflexis piriformibus, calyptra quadrangulari, foliis in bulbi formam congeftis. Rau Syn. 101. Cie ie) | SIOICTOS iM y a) SC Relb. Cant. 399- Funaria hygrometrica. Cn 6 SN OmT e Syn. Bryum hygrometricum. Hudf. Fl. An. 488. Mnium hygrometricum. Linn. Sp. Pl. 1575. With. Bot. Arr. v. 3.86. eae CR EL aC ahaa Mufi. Capf.witha lid. Veil fmooth. FlowerGen. Cuar. flalk from a terminal tubercle. Capfule drooping, pearStem none. Spec. CHar. Veil oblique, angular, with a flender fhaped. Leaves ovate, collected together at their beak. points. my1 RN CRYPTOGAMIA One“ YU M_shygrometricum. Yellow twifting Bryum. oe oa ein BR oa Nea a CR Mea,a hae hey Sper *%e, Oaverres. a CN PO an a ti als 3 a ry C3 £2, DS Ky ~La al e Ge » SE, ale v 4¢ \ “ * Wd ties N re ee a DEG a Che hs BAG re Re eo 1sMe 7 Ce | > a ae Sth $ ee, ed Tag Oe ae ~ ‘+ a iC he Poe Cte PEE,Ohne eC PUD A TS ET ak Che S ‘ 5 " an Olt Pi Chk Po KG 3 Che eee eee X Hi : + I te no Me oh. a eeeTan 2 . ‘i eeA Oe aCe a OTe dCi OS Pe) "Ot nll OL COL rr t OME SS . my te #2472* 5) 4 Bilal ACh es a Gpte or Cle eeat, Ci206 iL OO) ea. PDS . Nie ph“eh 4 ON eaeen ee _ tk ALLA eerf Pd Oe sya . ok 5 Cte POP my — LS ferry St am apie)= ee, Re ts ed Nat ed: i \ dO fat Oe 5 +e LS ek ry ee me é ds ee Ein , vee) Pon PaO i Or P| ea cy at Qa “ -%e ee ais Cla 2 Ee ail 7 oN Co) p Tru} %o. ©) aie “ea. er 7 aCe ®,, s ©) s VS ry % e ve \ DN osotat seg) Sd ia ~ 1 4 Fi Y iad % Pe ves as tes ee Pl ae 4 ad * ny Syn. Crocus sativus a Linn. Sp. Pl. 50. DES, aS Chie) DHS linear Huds. FI. 15. a An. 13. With. Bot. Arr. 37. Reth. Cant, Woodv. Med. Bot. t. 1°76. C. officinalis. Mart. Fl. Rust. t. 58. Crocus. Raii Syn. 374. Ger. em. 151. eno Tube of ey Sheath of one leaf, radical. re “SeeA Cuar. the corolla very long. Stigma in three deep divisions hanging out of the flower. eal Stigmas 6 Cor. in 6 divisions, regular, SS4 EF | Spec. Cuar. convoluted. 5 tea Gen. Monogynia. a) Lr a ac) a) ry TRIANDRIA Crocus. 0) ar Autumnal 7te or CBee Saffron, §autumnalis. CAL \ OS eT one FOROS a CROCUS cree nc f 343J : i) Sa hee) Bae rhe - Mi ibd | te i | Oe 2 So 3 Biker Oe Ne 7) i. 2 iS One 4 af pi ae) Ge ft. ws Se hn i Cae Ce Gs, este 5 ae root frequently grows from the bulb, which is considered by the cultivators as a disease. 7 :xo7 membranous sheaths, from which they emerge but little before the flowers fade; they are linear, dark green above, witha white longitudinal furrow; pale beneath, with a very prominent but flattened mid rib; their margins slightly revolute. Flowers sessile at the root, though with so long a cylindrical tube as to seem pedunculated 5 the limb in 6 elliptical, concave, rich-purple, regular segments. Stamina shorter than the corolla, erect. Style about equal to the coroljia, but hanging out on one side between 2 of its segments, being deeply cloven into three deep-orange linear stigmas (which are the Saffron itself), their edges rolled in, their summits notched.—It flowers in August or September. A kind of tap- F o England. See a full account of it in the Flora Rustica and Medical Botany. Root a depressed bulb. Leaves all radical, invested with Cee RO Chr i) ES COD fi i ETT Cd SAFFRON has very little right, as Professor Martyn observes, to a place in the British Flora, having been introduced from the south of Europe for culture as a medicinal plant. We should scarcely indeed have followed the example of our predecessors in retaining it, were it not for the authority of the Rev. Mr. Wood, who found it about Halifax, and of Mr. Whately, who observed it near Derby, according to Dr. Withering. Our specimen came from Saffron Walden, the only place in which this article of the materia medica is now produced for sale in Se Odi aT ee by 22°%2, ee GS i ’ ee Bs i ee ae ie Oe TS Ca ‘ Theta a el PO ra SOE rs aCe Ce at Ce TL P ACY ae Mint ak iit ee a rt Pe) ’ Chel PP ee) * , OG MO NO 6 iV et % t ieee : L ® 6 DEG ome sts he EAE bt Pe DIEG ee rte, te. ve) D246 ra OM PL ee oe ty Ss k ies ask Min Ak Manakin Meni OL 226 at, eT *<(s Oe h ean ott Pe Riek er AD pte TL oe SoC) Bie a ae ae hae ii Sra aX | aC i Pd Le oe i Pa Cy ~ sh) il ot cal Oa peas a SY cd Med is & z ie *e my ! Meal ae ed t a) at ge Ie , o) tl ra Or te, eae wae Fons Ye bs Pe P Sr sy. a Clee ee DS Pe ka i es e Pan > ba oe aC i Pe d Tt ¢ a _ ee ee SS Con a ¥ ie r Paes ede on rg 4 _ eile Ceie BD es “Y ‘ Ne a nate eae Sd aS Py 2 i) HG, Crocus. lee 4 Op on ats ©) aS™ ae Pad) 6° ah) Va DG j eee a tere ie as Hav 7, oie ry PE es Oba Cte 7 Pe Be tii | ie w Oa G Ps om Re-8e One pee e bd 3 iy A " spring plants, as every body knows by the numerous purple, yellow, and white varieties growing in every garden; the other IS quite an autumnal flower, and these differences are permanent under every mode of culture hitherto tried. y) : ; ° ce ee rn I HIS wild specimen of the Spring, or Garden, Crocus was gathered by Mrs. Sherbrooke of Arnold near Nottingham, March 15th last, in the same meadows where Dr. Deering observed it 60 or 70 years ago, and which are still rendered quite purple by these flowers every spring; so that this species at least appears to have a better right to be reckoned an English plant than many others universally acknowledged, as the Rev. Mr. Wood, F.LS. to whom we are indebted for the communication, remarks, Professor Martyn mentions having seen it at Battersea, near the mill, in considerable quantity, above 40 years ago. It differs from the Saffron Crocus in having broader leaves, with flatter or less revolute edges; yet that difference is not so constant as the great one of the stigmas, which in the plant before us are comparatively very little divided, the segments wedge-shaped, much and unequally notched, erect (not hanging out of the flower), of a paler colour, and quite destitute of the smell and cordial qualities of Saffron.—Their times of flowering are also widely different, this being one of the earliest A’ "ay ‘Caer Deering Noitingh. 60, a RO Cun OTRO vernalis ceruleus. $) 412 me With. Bot. Arr. 38. C. ae ,2¢ Syn. Crocus vernus. Mart. Fl. Rust. t. 59. C. sativus 8. Linn. Sp. Pl. 50. Huds. Fl. An. 13. we Cuar. Sheath of one leaf, radical. Tube of the corolla very long. Stigma in three short wedgeshaped lobes, enclosed within the flower. Chie Stigmas QS ~ 7 RE ae SN Spec. Cor. in 6 divisions, regular. Cis, Cuar. convoluted. 2 Gen. Monogynia. shte,\ TRIANDRIA EPR a0) ar kar ON OI Spring vernus. OE aC hart CROCUS. \ ES en a [ 844% ee PE . as Ea PR : P 0 OE ACTA Nn 5 Ne ak Raniah ree BERG esd “ ade) ae re Pe, aor AN Cte * oe cw P €es4en © 2? ar a "sa f AN pe Gey, ¥, ie Pe ava Oh hd Ty air yr A ia Chara rr 7 TE *.O2¢6° <7 Che eek aC Uses ve. 3. Toe sp DKC pes. a UA®e. ‘ SSL AC Mk Treen) te anak PP Dine aie Neat ies OE lee ; PO POL a AO Na a Yan y mr Rr ee ee -_ DHS INSee “Foe DHS AO CRidR Td) O OL Cid eA Le prada, eeD3a ete, Bie ztaih ieee es OL Te) cn , hh Orr: a ‘ ~~) | i. Sa aly» Oh "Oi, ae9 °R HE. ae eT a O hee Sa i PR Ta a ape had a ON i Wd pT atl pre lhe ENV “Ty Pd Aie aa thd blind ® 7 bs, OF de) Ca Id o ‘ aed "a. PD sale Ce a » J , O34 IBe ey i Pd f. A Da Woe ee 4 Moe i ar bl ' a I Site BAS. : nigrescens, 4 ao t ENE ks 5 Cie ws) aE Nor unfrequent on the trunks of trees in damp woods, or on moist rocks, &c. ‘It grows in patches lying close to the a) bark, especially the outermost OE :Fj “she. a eee Rees . ——— eee FE bas DG With. Ed ‘3 Huds. Fl. An. 537. ors Lichen nigrescens. Bot. Arr. v. 3..198. Relh. Cant. 430, Sibth. Ox. 328. Dicks. A. Sicc. fasc. 11.22. a a L. vespertilio. Lighif. Fl. Sc. 840, Lichenoides saxatile membranaceum gelatinosum tenue nigrescens. aii Syn. 72. L. gelatinosum membranaceum, tenue, nigricans. Dill, Musc. 138. t. 19.f, 20. lobes of the frond, which are rounded and entire, appearing very much wrinkled from nume- Chihe r Syn. Ce OL Or e acee CRYPTOGAMIA Alge. Geren. CuHar. Male, scattered warts. Female, smooth shields or tubercles, in which the seeds are imbedded. Spec. Car. Leafy, gelatinous, membranous, rugged and blistered, of a dark dull green, the lobes rounded. Shields clustered, reddish brown. ENE — Sey EC) ae oF & Eo EO Blackish, or Bat’s-wing Lichen, et a tea oe LICHEN :& ‘ fe rs. s ee a) Ges erie yRte ce vom 4a 3, mn ra ok ie i oO oe PB, Pe. -P sid ‘* plant, small, of a reddish brown, each elevated on a little protrusion of the frond, and with a slight entire green margin 2g Py ee i 1] MS iI ‘ eK) 7 LPM bn Med ib tba | | 1H) se "Om, ’ ES When old they become convex, eR A a RAE AOE ie Che nt IRGC, DAGFH ta originating from it. DS * t bit all over it, which are probably gemme, analogous to the bulbs of Dentaria bulbifera, Lilium bulbiferum, &c.; and this appears to be the most common mode of propagation in this Lichen as well as some others. The shields are rarely found. When present, they are clustered about the middle of the ad “ON Le little granules arise about the centre of the plant, and sometimes Fi aR o ? ee.) ¥ z Or rous oblong parallel pustule-like elevations in the substance of the frond, each of which is hollowed out on the under side, The whole plant is smooth, membranous, tender and gelatinous, of a dull deep green when wet, blackish when dry, and not unaptly compared by Dillenius to a bat’s wing. Clusters of SG Cr NS Ce Ce ili Pag t yS Seet i Ser st a ia re Cp OC IC ae Or Char tae Tes ; Ohh eK Ane A — va. Bee) die ACB eo nk ibidLd Aue See , Os Peer ited anak man chatelinnnteiniten 5 KC A ee PP DOC ile Shad AC ileh Ad Pte, TC ae Hsurrs Cis rr ey aL PR ty, Doe ote nash anaeh (thie zhahli KG OO da ; RAO oe a 0) £5. 02KG ; Die ee i - ACRay as ¥ POY OL ener gee iC) OAL oA 5 Ae Rae ee rae .i 3% nea a eS ke at Pe eS sald ie e ? Gis ' eor Siero taal ree 4 aC SC gw 2s o IND Fae *6.. Se. 2) ‘44 (* 99. 2K ve ie Ps “Sesr4A av i2 r, AVho m eda Lye he ee <6. bad ie é3 cs be @, Oa %, a4 a dee A oe Of ae A La HEP 6 ae >?) palustre. EPILOBIUM Willow-herb. Marsh Ps Narrow-leaved DEG |: 646. Ones 2OS f. ee DIG oY y J ad woa os Cy iat ite "m, wy LD) ed NS a CO 2g Capsule NG he ary Oe aC ree ee roe G ‘pe ne b) od 2 4 6 o of ba Ar ee) af > about a foot high, erect, eS) Stem fibrous. the young leaves, % eS slightly hee ho Ce leafy, a downy, as are also calyx. Leaves opposite, nearly sessile, and flower-stalks, germen very obsoletely toothed. linear-lanceolate, obtuse, entire or , the petals so notched Flowers erect, small, of a pale purple apace: MY eee Seeds very numerous; ed. as to be often inversely heart-shap The upper leaves, crowned with a tuft of long slender hair. from whose bosoms the flowers weea ‘Sy ST 7 é . perennial, Root round, > Fas we) *G" being generally smaller. and almost entire leaves, as well as in attractive of the whole It flowers in July, and is one of the least genus. al *9,,5 a Or Le es though easily overIn marshy moorish land not unfrequent, onum, from whichy. looked from its resemblance to E. tetrag round stem, narrow however, it sufficiently differs in haying a is a ie $) 6s Some- spring, are alternate. times the whole herb is smooth, or scarcely downy, except ? De aia N Raz . oO ee OO a Ber ; ze Relh. Cant. With. Bot. Arr. 391. Fl, An. 163. 2. 15. fasc. Sicc. H. Dicks. Sibth.Ox.123. 154, %, < } ’ oe SS . es ts 6 ras Sh 7% via) the yery young shoots and germens» Ce ane UJ :@) ' Huds. Linn. Sp. Pl. 495. Epilobium palustre. Lysimachia siliquosa glabra minor angustifolia. Syn. B11. ‘jo ‘ Syn. ASC) Seeds feathered. oblong. entire. sprc. CHAR. Leaves opposite, lanceolate, nearly erect. Stem . the’énd Petals notched at fy Petals 4. Cal. in 4 segments. Gen. Cuar. a Monogynia. pf OCTANDRIA ee eC as Pr) oea a) i ee et AC) . eC eo “4 ae 3Oe je) An eid o>oS c at A rr Seaaa DS % ra DY of} OF pe aS ?, a Fed) MONG "Pn > mS 12 2 a0 Ste. oe 54% yg es a ° a6) PEO * v7 ~ tm br Pen ee = ORI LU 2G ve - y | OE LC ue DE e | ye T PO TTY bee a ; ROC v" ui CORNER Th y Banik Diet i ange OE nana ES Cite a SO ty Pe de! che as a} Cad te se m ae a piace 3 CR AM Ae a ea coraaencete asa aie (jpnRO ay Seve " " nC ita VA geal Nee ie) e Ne DG OR Rh A eS Miah den)| ae Pay is i AM 7 Pes Va eC eT OL Rak ATA OE aes ie cic Taree ee 5ae A FS ay os i.e feyed > OF ed a) 7 lL. 7 °*@, C6 a7. Oe Aa ai Pe hy he 5= cae ee a H * . Cd wa “PS ale Peat) ‘ ey : bee eS a) — N 9an/ ON ie te phe oi) oe ri hae pe AC Eat Pet Dee ALA Ct ca) Pad | al ore hor Ld, SOR ce % + i ” ae << keChe? : Gasper ; a . a Pp a Pe eS Aeie Tae) epAicf*%e, oe. = Pos viv" wtih cf ete maf ar Ay? ’ baled ere ae 2 PR rae Sec sen fe, ea, yg. Ps *)7(6 et cS "7 ee id i) ee ; 27 é ¥3 oak: eae MOE . J ey, eg - yr Oe Se) 1 ea ie ae ve 200 DIRT DRE were r Sr \ iy \ \ actadenaseers BV ZS eeePe Uw ya 5s . ab Beg | Florets Cuar. sessile and barren. irregular: aches aM Ey Foe DEG "Me V7 LW oi ' those CT Cen. disk of the Fruit crowned with the calyx. a \ Leaflets of the radical leaves wedge- Spec. CHAR. 7 _ A Digynia. ote] PENTANDRIA e Water-dropwort. ad NS PT Parsley §pimpinelloides. mers OENANTHE a) [ 347J LEN linear x) iC ies of several involucrum leaves. DK J eS *95.5 ia Rev. Mr. Hemsted, and vv E have received this from the latter gathered it in The s. from the Rev. Mr. Hugh Davie . Wales North salt marshes near Aber, fusiform fleshy consisting of several slender ahr oa wi, aC . Stem erect, or ascending; tubercles, intermixed with fibres with so many angles as to be almost cylindrical, striated, l leaves bipinnate ; smooth, leafy, not much branched. Radica -shaped, and the leaflets either elliptical and entire, or wedge bipinnate 5 ely scarc e, more or less cloven: Stem-leaves pinnat Involucra al. termin s Umbel leaflets long, linear and acute. us. Calyx numero most ones partial the of several linear leaves, Petals of 5 unequal, sharp, spre ading, considerable leaves. OL 1 Cte ee, = S e Sone! Cee Jd he Che inversely with a point so inflexed as to re oder them mes reddish on someti tribe, this of many haped, as in ES unequal, heart-s KC ed perfect but few The flowers appear in July, and the back, 4 = ¢ seeds. a Che we 5 F Je @ ee poisonous, but the whole genus This species is not esteemed dangerous y to be suspected, on account a. € the very is certainl a eo , ay Chie tes Oenanthe crocata. al * 7°*e 9 Ty.) © Fa ee ee a gee SAN a a eee ee - Ta ~ a. ‘oO ae es "Pend Be 2 rr oes eC) ere _ . f z= a i em SS Pe a & - Root perennial, iM Ta bh ab eg Bs Rie ey, aes ee ‘A KC 210. 66%, Linn. Sp. Pl. 866. Ocnanthe pimpinelloides. Huds. Fi. An. 121. With. Bot. Arr. 297. Raii Syn. O. Staphylini folio aliquatenus accedens. Syn. mat UJ General long. very As linear; shaped, cloven; those on the stem entire, an Se ~ a SOY en aeA a"ry S or a Pe ‘ Cia ¥ eras Ce ne » @ ie oe} am be] of ' eek Qs iene OE Oe i Cie oO ON mo) Rr a\ a i! Lt Pee) PAT | et) PF 2 eee) rae PTT ea, Zea , eas) je ee) Aan >. asa Ca md CML ie bed | Ba es OL Cs to Lag Wo wy| Pegs gh as ) tie OE RL ES r OO SACS Cie ee 5 Beek iilDES Hai” DKS Lg ¥} °¢ av ee as] aOR es 6 Te. BS Re CT DRS co Cat i Ry oS ¢ « ‘ 4 od LJ 2 2 t “_ ih owe a 3 : ed ae a ie a Me . ee a tee oe) ** oe 1) MOE A ian) ull. bd (bd ep Nf Ne ie e *%eq, Se ¥, toa tS ti ay Cr aa Extn a Ne Mes Arle SOc Paes ee sen fe Pe, er *7-(4 4 eC re rnd rc A oak. A ® Water-dropwort. Fruit crowned with the calyx. are Og Pe ieee Or Chr) aiv Chee Cae POEhee 2’ ON NP ommeutiann cg es x impregnated by marginal ones frequently female only, being those of the centre. . ® ty Dou Ot ope dee | s taae ? a a reddish, the The flowers appear in June, and are often Cat - erect. MS - . 3 pee a ae - : fresh inland waters. knobs, The root of this consists of thick oval or elliptical dangerous which taste something like parsnep, but are probably well as taller food. Stem thicker than in the preceding, as ves scarcely stem-lea e; bipinnat leaves Radical and more erect. by which it is more than pinnate ; leaflets all linear and acute, as well as by the at once distinguished from the preceding, are scarcely ever there which of um, involucr want of a general also fewer and are umbel general the of rays The signs. any calyx 1s more the and much thicker than in O. pimpinelloides, OKC **008 Lo val! nT4 at vo 1 3K-59, Me VJ y) the SENT by W. Mathew, Esq. from near Bury, and by Professor Bedford. of Rev. Mr. Abbot from the neighbourhood Sibthorp also found it in several places about Oxford, as mennoticed this tioned in his Flora. No other British author has oides, pimpinell O. species, probably having confounded it with im grows folia peucedani while which is rather 4 maritime plant, “ay at Leaflets all linear. General involucrum Spec. CHAR. Knobs of the root sessile, elliptical. none. Pollich Plant. Palat. Ocnanthe peucedanifolia. Syn. 98. Ox. Sibth. 3. t. vol. 1.289. rARAP G) Av. p pSy eC) NS IC) sessile and barren. those of the disk | J Ve Oia yy Florets irregular: i Gen. Cuar. Digynia. ‘Chey PENTANDRIA AS tM PRO Sulphurswort peucedanifolia. 2 OENANTHE 20) ro Sie] ? Sg Oars oe) ea Cae ee oe Pe ~ a re ere ST) ee ae ie Oe a) i] SOR i % Oita CS? ¥ % i SO TC Oe kel e hk Ce | Che Ne ak Phi Pe cS ek Oe eC hdOe a & i I : . 3 A 6 Oe = ee Y, : Or Or Che ‘ tLiei BRON Te PP a eer hs Ole POEs COM OS TP. e ry ; * : Pee . del Pe Kets i pe 1-3 HS ’ id als oe J ise DIES Fa CMe OL, iC Bid Pak a Mie Pk ay CRs PRL eee | ese esti An > DHS v i Rae cask ieeeORG liana Pa a cA peelAc Oe PA, oa AC tke Peek aN Bien ahie ie siz, aivn.¥ ARI OLdre Bias itn e $64 DC @ % is 0 DR OL eek “IS yh Cy ae iW DHE: a) thee cry ba 2 aa ae ea 2 o ad ‘ 7 a Seer ed oO ee 7 e lt ¢ *s,. oi A 7a ie *e..*) te 9, OSX, ie iC) a. gt Et JE, el “og ea a) tivio "Pe Sein eay.-2%e Ci *Se LO +e 6s Ped PS Oe ed Aree oO —" dT C1 PALL ae o Das -*%o, *o TU —* Hi are Aa Oe % Pa w o %ys a ae Pe 7 ei i By KG OT Chee Chea | he JT 7 > ar ake Ue 3G as Hawkweed. CY Cal. imbricated, ovate. Pa Ree REE rR Seed-down simple, sessile. Leaves Stem erect, many-flowered. CHar. half-emovato-lanceolate, dentated, hairy beneath, bracing the stem; the lower ones elliptic-lanceolate. Syn. Hieracium sabaudum. Linn. Sp. Pl.1131. Huds. Relh. With. Bot. Arr. 849. Fl. An. 345. titi vgs ah) eA 724 4 Chhe he a ie Pe a) IC} VP. Fal rf) cd y t eS ait Syn, 16 i ae UJ ir r’ . Ae Sibth. Ox. 241. Cant. 298. H. fruticosum latifolium hirsutum. ) LOE Sprc. A Mad ie Recept. naked. AC) Gen. Cuar. Polygamia-equalis. @\se°% SYNGENESIA OAKS ¢ eG DKS 7S ye i DKS Shrubby sabaudum. rs TC) 77) NNO THE RACLUM. iy ae Loe i AS — The root is perennial. e ot) Stem erect, 2 or 3 feet high, round, Oe SO, hl aCe =2 Re et PhO SYOC especially, strong and woody, hairy in the lower part more broad, ate, altern Leaves top. the leafy, panicled more or less at they n margi of kind which (of ed dentat acute, very distinctly h above ; smoot almost and green dark; le) examp afford a good beneath: the lower paler, somewhat glaucous, and very hairy elongated at their and form, cal ones are of a lanceolate-ellipti ovato-lanceolate, stem the on base; the greater part of those - ones gradually smaller, half-embracing the stem; the upper , form- ON FR A 7 ry) b . of ier L "+ downy and the floral ones entire. Flower-stalks erect, different apmany to e liabl is ing a thin corymbus, which depearances, either from the injuries of animals, or different Ze Flowers erect, open in the forenoon only. Stigma set with nish. and hairv. Anthere gree y ed 5 ea ts grees of luxuriance. Ose, yO eS = e Pe ee te ~ e Calyx down . Herb blackish hairs. Receptacle cellul ar, often a little hairy milky. In shady damp places the whole plant is sometumes smooth, but always rigid and firm in texture. a cen Aca e “3 ° Ae id f\ ke ut especially on a eravelly FREQUENT in coppices and groves, mber. Septe soil, flowering from July to % A, . orm "i i ee —~e, 9 Asie, ee ee ~ - © SS is cS ee 5 are) . bs eT oe ee es DS Oe 0 a P he st SOT peg DE OR ROr ACRE SRR £80, DESDE0 7H ie ft z ~ Po GPa DRC |- cs Sheik : A J oscnmeniceisaiat econ Ps DHS ES ee wpe) Sos eels CEN MTG A ee os als ° OS vere ) ; S472 oe OO Be One oe OR ORIOL eae oy r Oa ROL OMNES CM ROL CMS Oe ~- ie ORL Aa Binet ik : ihe. v is a ee) A anche heliinectiahe tial err a ey a “Peel Tie SY. nw ee rele ris Ca) a OR, . oe sire? A a a oren el Te t ae Oe TidPe a re ' CF “EG, ae : . FO ete ea eIPei TXie Tete, Id lp A ty, lh > (lad. tnmat Sepnsan fe a EPSE! Fin es r3 feta, bs ek Pe. a IS 7K ae le pve ny lean a me Ce cae NN b. ea et Cae fom » Cae " ee ; aS1 a DY Meee eo Bie ray % 7 SY 0 Ps do - i P00? e hee = domestica. Service Cen ee: ie ik Bi PYRUS YY = PT . Es Tree. ar Petals 5, Apple inferior, he ee ee Pentagynia. Cal. 5-cleft. Ww 4 ) "S40 a) Pee C TAPP OR gre Te aie ESC) eeEOOOOOE iin E BOO with 5 cells and several seeds. Spec. Cuar. Leaves pinnate: leaflets equal, downy beneath, serrated towards the point. Flowers in panicles. Syn. Sorbus domestica. Linn. Sp. Pl. 684. Huds. fil. An. 215. » With, Bot. Arr. 514. Crantz. Stirp. fasc. 2. 48. tab. 2. f. 3, Sorbus. Raii Syn. 452. er exerts, a with an odd terminal one of the same size; all entire base, serrated from about half way to the end, smooth ee UF > EC i) AP ae | at the above, co always 5, with oblique concave stigmas. Fruit pear-shaped, reddish and spotted, extremely austere, and not eatable till it 3 ne, mellowed by frost or time, when it becomes brown Od i - and very soft. Ceils5, with one seed in each. Every botanical principle whatever obliges us to remove this tree from the genus of Sorbus, as Crantz also observes, who teat 7} more temper. From an fruit, we have found it a one seed in each bivalve peculiar to this species. accurate examination genuine pyrus, havcapsule of the apple, The pinnated leayes Gs hae OL ad written with of the half-ripe ing indeed only but that is not @) " Would have been more regarded in many cases than he is, if he DRS DRGTRG 0D " mi: “ | CMe hi or dae Mt F3 An are (as to habit) a much more important objection. Ltt 3 Cie to Cie downy beneath, but that downiness goes off towards autumn. Flowers in panicles, cream-coloured. Calyx very woolly. Petals concave, with hairy claws. Stamina numerous. Styles 18 quite 4 Chee ; idl “*.. . liek ee PS] ne MY ye ee A a LY ee a - a Oe ‘oe ar) Ne Pen / ye : s we. ~ — % » i “ : PN 7 < “ SF | won A ie eerie e pee a, UJ ? ect WE have been favoured by Lord Viscount Valentia with fresh wild specimens of this rare British plant, gathered from a solitary tree in the middle of Wire forest, near Bewdley, Worcestershire, the same probably that was observed by Mr. Pitts in Ray’s time. It is said to grow also in the mountainous parts of Cornwall and Staffordshire, and may now and then be net with in old gardens, having been formerly cultivated for the sake of its fruit, which is like, but inferior to, a Medlar. It flowers in May. The tree is of a middle size, not unlike the Mountain Ash, of very slow growth, not flowering till it arrives at a great age, and the wood is very hard. Leaves alternate, composed of tout 7 or 9 pair of opposite, sessile, ovate or oblong Iecaflets, err a ihe eas ICOSANDRIA Gren. Cuar. ae “Chis a ey ee ION ee ae atl a sie ete. | 6 a, a) Pavia AiY\\ NOSE? ) a ce rN —— — a ‘ ee ON ORT eNO = TORR CR , One CC i Or On Or COMO 7 M7 DIG re H ar M NS ee Hy RMS RO ie CML ORS OES ne CMU, Sie IE CORTE lite MOE ORR = ry \o CBr ry rau) eS ¥ ad) CR ea ACR eae SOM ri 3i . Fo Tt & 4 » » ae ay " eset ee DG Beal isha iinachah Minera 7. 6s 7° © IEG. nn at. ia eA) Pr Oe ae LC) eas | > at = >): > %s, eee) ° a . 5 Pdi ee Lates?a,. oS ee and Mi (th 1 a a Se DEG ee SO “00, SUK, RI 90. M76 6,, + P f Slag. 227, Ps Ee (en SAS a| F w oe ‘ tin P aa ed = Pei? ce BRD é > a phe LS at) Nee a aie) oF hae AO ar Digynia. ” DECANDRIA . > HIG Knawel. Pe ne alps. ee, SCEERANTHUS Annual Sibth. Ox. 138. Razi Syn. 159. he t so 1a Huds. Linn. Sp. Pl. 580. eek Relh. Cant. Bot. Arr. 436. My arCV Fl. An.178. 165. Knawel. on PBEs i) iC da 2 ry s) Gi Ae or, if destroyed, plants that generally survive the winter, are C ee that happen repi aced by another crop arising from those seeds not to vegetate till spring. numeRoot annual, Jong, not much branched. Stems very at bent decum ost outerm the rous, spreading in all directions, a round, all length, whole their prostrate not only, the base little downy, much branched, leafy, pale, sometimes reddish. ae sae ‘Sn ee ee erence Noruinc can be more common ona sandy soil than Scleranthus annuus, especially in fallow fields. It is an annual, flowering about the middle of summer, and sowing its seeds very abundantly in autumn, which produce a crop of young CEN U a SDE ae atch nee eS v WME Ones With. pre Chass Scleranthus annuus. PAC) Stems spreading. ing teeth. Syn. “4 rk nn mL Seeds Cor. none. Cal. of one leaf. Cen. Cuar. two, enclosed in the calyx. Spec. CHar. Calyx of the ripe fruit with sharp spread- f) ote G a +59 $ — or) Cer AS membranous Leaves opposite, united at their base by a dilated, TE Na 2 | 1 a ANTM % C are 10, but generally from 5 to 8, of which several J rs sometimes SOR CRO Stamina shorter than the calyx, membranous at their edges. ay IIE IL . EK short and imperfect. Germen superior, ovate. Styles spreading. Seed enclosed in the permanent hardened Stigmas downy. calyx, often solitary (as several writers remark) ; but we have ee eae >) A Flowers of the same a grassy green, not glancous nor silverv. shez Se We : : ‘ 10 ribs, with Calyx colour, sessile, in terminal leafy clusters. little a teeth, spreading sharp 5 and cloven half way down into Tee Rees i ee) of and downy margin, linear, somewhat keeled, acute, smooth, £ ya hee eis 3 |, a, |} J Ls Ce Sol ee ee i a Riel Tn nail te aie AG ier a - re, e} wd’ Ch o> - Cate Pri Rn found two, or at least the ynripened rudiments of two. oe a) ae Ld Pen / Ae = pS comme Ce oe = TS ‘i as CaaS Ae ~e | Melt D ( Vag? OE SRF pede OK ee SO MOK 9, t es O9EG a TT lie) aha oes Pot a id . ; DHS ‘ : DG _ a a CaN CI _ 7 A aa cn | : + re NE CL a veneaiaail } PM ea a ‘i at sae nt OT a ose a a ee an a ag pian . os SDN CM RC Re = ee tena Marah Roe CCE RRC — - er) cet yr Ab pte afee7@ Bie ik Maaco Binh ee) Mitesh SORE CR OS OEe he ea ae ©) ak, ie Ta *¢ Calas © - J . ba cd hs 2 _ "s« 9 press a ee) be) 4 ‘ re DAKE" SM CC $50, Tw Pies a) a “oe 3 atCa) ae Pee Se Dot om as (| Pe? a sé Sart ee “2 pic f*?, bs oat) eee Pe, eat A, a ari or a I €) EN Pe dod Cll Pat Pte 2 ee Ree Os id ol C3 — id > 9 e, Py A a. Fs A si Bites ea 4 at as aes Man Py [ 352] co a Ee aed oe Pe ae aE SCLERANTHUS. Knawel. eer) Ch NeLS tye vir Seeds aL) a) Stems prostrate. Huds. Linn. Sp. Pl. 580. aii Syn. G\nkz asa) i Fl. An. 178. With. Bot. Arr. 437. Knawel incanum flore majore, perenne. 100, t.. 80. 35 & Syn. Scleranthus perennis. aR Calyx of the ripe fruit with obtuse in- curved teeth. WES Spec. Cuar. none. oh] CuHar. Cal. of one leaf. Cor. two, enclosed in the calyx. Cie Gen. Digynia. @ DECANDRIA. Me nT I OC hy DG aor by ha Perennial perennis, is much more rare than the preceding, having hithertb OM Gn 2, PT ie, PA Tuts aac been observed only in Norfolk and Suffolk, always on the driest telat a) oO ‘Chee A, is cous, * covered with shining pellucid tubercles,” according to Ak Os SZ aN Cae) Cie ery We Cd Phd nd et Se ¥ we J ia « iC bad eect te ee, a Chee 3JP par a tes Oh a Bees Oe, Pee ts _ hl \ 7) ‘ “0% a a plant. oe) = es ap PTC re ; 7. ° ee vaca er a bs 2 enti oat id ba wT eet eg de wad a) 7 Pe es a PF ad ai piled) 4 eee) ae *) ST kay e058, a pee ae be acs ss’ . er Chae ; Segments of Mr. Mathew’s remark, and sometimes downy. S. annuus, in than border the calyx with a more membranous earlier The inward. curved and obtuse their points much more flowers in the end of summer are of a very silvery appearance, and attract the eye at a distance. Filaments not all perfect, Calyx in the flowering state cloven rather more than half way down, but not so when the germen swells, externally pubescent. brown. When growing old the whole plant becomes of a reddish upright, and large too 1s Synopsis Dillenius’s figure in Ray’s and shows nothing that could serve to discriminate so difficult ®»,, 7s OF ed Pe Te 's ee ley Piaf ” add i barren sandy heaths. We received it from the neighbourhood Noof Bury, by favour of W, Mathew, Esq. flowering in vember, for it is later in that respect than authors mention. The root is said to be perennial, but that we have not been able to verify. Stems perfectly prostrate and close pressed to, the ground, downy in the upper part, often purplish, much branched, especially towards their extremities. Leaves glau- B <= SVT VINO Se FO Py ¥ PRO i ws On , Qe * Oe Ten atk Mant sak it cL e ui a, ae al a \ ~¥ ae CRON cnn cL ROE aul = sae “ead ot + — DOR LOY ac ’ Aa ry ae OE a Ean a Te + 8 Dann sb Bish taal a Ca ME ee Cie te se 4 - i Chie ror Cle ee SCR es Cla Oe e Rhee’ > Pe¥ rm Cthb Ou Bent Bhan cS RR is api IN NN Nee aN ny ‘Pee7 se Pa Pe Pes le, ms ba a PEL Pi AE ay oe te Tal es, ay er 7 i Ge) Oe a ie . 7? ?o, oN “ a Pea feiar Et . s Wie ae P Pah > eC) te sities ee > me “SeadAc . rie4 el) CF PP ee Lon as | a PN Sod aivia Sec ce Pt d7nfe tante Fe.” 8a.. . 5 4 le p2tg Sa. SGjIAG 7K $ Bet AVS ih eT CT oe LICHEN © whee ge 92h ~ °F cae. ge 1h PCR. 2 ca ie a ty s Oat Oneae ian ar re ad ya bale thats +. ates plumbeus. ocr nL E . Lead-coloured spongy Lichen. .) ca at Gen. Cuar. eo CRYPTOGAMIA Alge. scattered warts. Male, . thick, very with \ale oo OM ns C underneath clothed greyish ; ey which the Female, smooth shields or tubercles, in seeds are imbedded. Segments lobed, obtuse, Imbricated. Spec. CHar. bP asVP Jp ere ie aC rc r eae —e Said . e 2 2) he eee Se OE te Shields small, flat, rustyblueish, spongy down. . entire ns coloured; their margi Scot. 826. t. 26. f. 2. fLighi eus. plumb n Liche Syn. 187. 3. With. Bot. Arr. v. Dicks. H. Sice. L. cerulescens. Huds. Fl. An. 531. fase. 10. 24. Dill. c facie, Lichenoides tenue et molle, Agari 73. fe Musc. 179. t. 24. new > CR OL Cie ep 2 ihe ase or . last summer by Dr. Smith. Broucut from Cardiganshirine the mountainous counties of trees, of i VA It grows on trunks Great Britain, not unfrequently. ry a S eNO Ck DRL FL entire margi or rusty-coloured, with an nearly bear no shields are frequently colour. Specimens which , which have been prewarts or ions ulat gran takes for covered with grey rs, and are what Hedwig sumed to be the male flowe be rather analogous to them ct suspe to ned incli such, We are aria bulof Lilium bulbiferum, Dent to gemme, or the bulbs them og ¢ bad bears in those) the plant which bifera, &c. and that (as bear flowers OF seeds; though these to ency tend less a has ld-bearing fronds. We have warts do also occur on the shie never, however, traced them to young plants. ’ PRG 4D DRC, DRG 3 the bark on which they grow is often prominent and visible or lead-coloured down, that which seems to be forced up leaf, the of in beyond the marg much the texture of Boleéus very has plant by it. The whole ; though, not having seen ved obser well nius versicolor, as Dille far from excellent. Mr. are e figur and n iptio it recent, his descr surface is smooth, but upper The r. bette Lightfoot’s are much The shields are very d. wrin ‘nkle ly not shining, often longitudinal frond, and often the of disk the numerous, scattered over a small size, flat, reddish-brown clustered and confluent, of n nearly of the same «y<B oa Brie Awios. x. et iva Cie asi | i tae Oe rs atal U i 5 i a and cork-like, elevated from The fronds are remarkably thick by a dense spongy coat of blue > cs a ies ee.loeteiC oS ee Ze us 4 " , acti . , AAtoattadtediets 4 ‘ aS Sealed TD SSofa ded Oe eer cyOEeve preAO] e. ee , ee \SLae7° te, Oe, Dele i 5 a Ce erat $4, ad ewrwyvete POR alt OR =. is Bilas sk itis RCL ORE OO tO ev TV IV ete Vt ‘i i Kh s CN OR LOR ORO <= |a ns . sd‘a ) sh My NO Bo thee PO Rea fh sh Bink Ditanch einai Oe - Ree OL ORE ORE ORE SORE TORN ACUOROY CLM 5 Ai oy ra) ts a i ey Bik on 62% <) See th Ot Pn Pra L OY Acer ocr oR To a Dea Px - “ att eote . sieCa ®°—,/ 7s 7°*e sl IG kre e. eg ei AO) ie, fad S aE a ae reer cr St ix, als ee a) Pees, eg OF *®e. “AEG Dz ies 7 SS MT Ae 3 SHE 6\sb 6. , ee DEG -*%e “oe 3 DKJ e » ” F (e MIAN <9e. iG WIAvi\2 ena a7 | , mT q a © 8-5 Sido we a DHEA A ae ED ats ad es ee =) SPIE, HHI race 2, vw Oe) = a E cee) { ees a Or. KEG “ty, Bryum. ae) ar RE aC) SL Chee Broom scoparium: 9 Ls BRYUM 354.] e > HGF, f MPa CRYPTOGAMIA Musci. ie . %e5./%, re VJ s r Ww Py a) Icy Olid ot] A ra) ©) Ayers day @ J, U —— a ee i SS oie Curt. Lond. fasc. 1. t. 69. Cant. 403. B. erectis capitulis angustifolium, caule reclinato. Raii Syn. 95. | B. reclinatum, foliis falcatis, scoparum efigie. Dill. Musc. 357. t. 46.f. 16. Dicranum scoparium. Sibth. Ox. 281. “- OS ESO Huds. Relh: Bryumscoparium. Linn. Sp. Pl. 1582. Fl. An. 483. With. Bot. Arr. v. 3.106. Syn. KE, Tae ae! Caps. with a lid. Veil smooth. HowerGen. CHar. stalk from a terminal tubercle. Capsules a little curved, with an awlSppc, CHaR: shaped lid. Leaves curved to one side. Stem reclining. 5 : oe] oS GY, Ps 3 Hsry Za fy i. > a i Oh 7) wm), in the house. eta a little curved or reclining; clothed with brown nee silky down; wv insane but The stems are perennial, long; standing close together, ae a ee -ceiiaeseeteorerte ground, and the A COMMON moss on heaths, dry pasture discernible by easily , patches large in g growin trees, of trunks kind of artielegant their silky glossiness, and which make an when kept pots, garden of mould the ficial turf for clothing cylindrical, a little curved. Oe w ith clustered stalks; The capsules are nearly ‘ eS see Dill. fig. D, is a distinct species. Veil of the Lid long and taper. LTT 4 =, a eee aCe) sot Male flowers few, terminating game figure, straw-coloured. spreading in some of the stems, and surrounded with leaves see e eT ccaaeeaane AAT a w ey ae | 10 reason to suspect the kind iC ed PEGE ee tant and we have a eves ON pee Reng Mi OE from The stalks appear in the early part of summer, arising of a erect, long, are and the scaly termination of each stem, y; solitar mostly are They d. twiste reddish shining yellow, and the form of a star. a Ay mG pete ry) . > Cpe ted hee Te Ce tapering, entire and with numerous, thick-set, narrow, finely the summit. about lly especia side, one s toward leaves, curved Rt , te : - . CMTE re rs a " OO ~e F . 3 psy SO TORS Mt 5 , nes i id hes)OS ie oe ay 2 la Oe Se Be Bt aie ie ted > NAS Ck bs ray Oe & . " te 1s Pi oe Chk tor Pe DIK he ~ BOE DEG My Bilal ang, Bark ee ae Che ROL ACT MSOn fs \ 4 ’ “ai acing cio z es Nea e Bi , oe ae b Binh ; } . ry Pee eT ii , a naMann 82h kB ee ROS aCe ROE ACR AO : “Sea ct tacts ROS COM )j Or ORAL OMe i Citra Otte ss ae ey ROE Ses a eye 2 Pa ke) astAE ss COE Ck scenes Gai Nee “ny ei fe eaay ve oj Ss oC) Ree 3 62% vy ita phil teh Cla mon ICR AioLCita meee eina at ean 2hah din OT s S227 A OG “Pe. St) Pe. Poe, oC ie SK (."* e ree EO a TORO Pid Ps Rts Pe | © A SF ek ‘FING | Oe, eee ae ak é i Oe EE Oe a ek Be Pain Pe ee a Fe C,) a PP > bd Cth Pi Se TRY da ee On Tea a . ¢ So Oe 6. SIAN ‘ i eo a a about 6, elliptical, . Ey 2 veiny, often DKS : cy rvs Fs!=LS purplish at the GC Ree .) Chet © TAL. VL 4 a a . P34 acs ic & (,°*e te mens downy. : The leaves, and even petals, are sometimes sprinkled with a minute fungus, taken by Mr. Curtis for the work of some insect, but described by late authors under the generic name See Mr. Sowerby’s English Fung), ¢. 53. en aN, oak hate DE Chi - ee — Ef er 7 Cc , hm LT Oe of Aicidium. ao srs eA AAC Os a6 G 7 4,076 a ae bh] Ly ary i aL | Vew aC Cee iz, a Vv NOC latr ce) Pee TRC Petals back. Stamina much shorter than the corolla; sometimes changed into narrow petals as in the double Hepatica. Ger- | = ts Ries tg >» so. ae riously lobed and cut: radical ones on long foot-stalks: those on the stem 3 together, not far from the flower, on. shorter dilated stalks. Flower on a downy flower-stalk, solitary, without calyx or bracteze, unless the stem-leaves should be deemed ain , Vs Leaves ternate, slightly hairy, paler beneath, the leaflets va- Se BA \ ; wer ks > Ce eS aCe Pee, | | vi = i Groves and thickets throughout England are plentifully decorated with this elegant plant in the month of May, and it forms one of the most pleasing ornaments of that favourite season. The blossoms expand only in fine weather, drooping and folding up their petals against rain. Goats and sheep are the only domestic animals that will eat the wood anemone. To the former its acrimony is pleasant and wholesome, as they peculiarly delight in vegetables of this order; to the latter, when not accustomed to such food, it occasions a bloody flux, according to Dr. Withering. The root is oblong, black externally, a little fleshy. Stem from a terminal bud, solitary, simple and single-flowered. ‘@ Bg, we 2 a" “Pang /Ay 2 rae led id ce aaa ~ <9 Neve Se ae a ‘“ Pend a ie ND mig Peet te Ss D gt ees DY 2 bed Te tie TR add ie Pa hare 7 as a Sh y Bor a Ria Oi Oe i at aed SE re OS Werte, Seeds CHar. Seeds pointed, without tails. Leaflets lobed. Stem single-flowered. Syn. Anemone nemorosa. Linn. Sp. Pl. '762. Huds. Fl. An. 236. With. Bot. Arr. 566. Reih. Cant. 209. Sibth. Ox. 170. Curt. Lond. fasc. 2. ¢. 38. A. nemorum alba. Raii Syn. 259. Fs aor ee Petals six or nine. a Pad Cal. none. oren Spec. CHar. many. Polygynia. ra PS DKS Gen. ee DMS POLYANDRIA Pert) oe \ a AY ON 7 OPS Ee Wood Anemone. y 6 PL nemorosa. Le ANEMONE Gk ee ea * eS Oh i $58J he tL ERS Seen:SC ‘ere ra} e+ aris THAT — Sew VIN eee ad) ee é Ni oe. 7) 7-(4 a a sane eka ~ rn ba ~“SOs4 OND Ls ea oe AAV SSa ne tle i Pee mmca re pe bs ® Ait . A ty, Orders Mag, HSB iar ¢ . nt a Or, an? . ° PC) > hed] Reeier eG et» " Chr ToC en > oad bas oy rae ®° , & i 9 , ®») oyDa - ve $ ‘ ORE at " a Ci aN Ohh ae *. ree an ne ras. M kes” : tha oh Bites We ae ~ io U rau) ;1 o a 4 a ee OL eeeke I se * taeeer **e4" lets ; arr Cicas PRR Cer) Meee a Bete Pe rr) Gla A * Pee rf " ae ca eME (cA Hk", aS Ss) i a i aat R OE en OE ice cn ROE vai ROE eee) ee. U ROS aca BRS ex a te —_ \ J Vv Fy se te dot DIA 66 Ae ) NF the, ed > OF Pheae "Se SHn on dale 0, DEG Sd PD EN i, ene Socls7nle ese Aree Se. MiG e @,, awe ; We ok) NE ICY a a ee Be ie ea wy % lad vyTVA WT AKG, 2,2 co 3 S95 sei) ia aa | ee pie 13 Cs Sau “acy % DEG ma ee SRE RE ee. [3.4 Calamus. An Flag. at Sprc. CHAR. Pe od Caps. of ESF) Style none. Cor. of six petals, naked. three cells. wr Monogynia. Spadix cylindrical, clothed with florets. Cuar. Vor ik) C 4 ») CC aes wad SS as re OIE Gen. . ey aa HEXANDRIA . ONT vi Dees Sweet b Rn ACORUS Summit of the stalk above the flowers ve! aia te a e er) a oe a very common inhabitant of pools, ditches, at the Mayor’s annual feast in June, i\ IK fe) af, AP axaerry el 6 aC eT ee x Ree is not ely rare. We and banks of rivers, and the flowers are extrem t, Esq. gathered Lamber B. A. from en specim wild this d receive both above and below near Hampton Court, In the river Yare, other places, insomost in than ul plentif more is it Norwich, al LHIS 7 the cathedr with aay tapering, 1s cylindrical, be and summit, S to the innumerable, thick-set, green flowers, 1G AOE a ee ame ees RC which comes from the root OX thicker below Stem like the leaves, except in being mid-way out laterally (in June or July), about * KS ee = socom saa naked, clothed six stamina rather shorter each having six inflexed equal petals, stigma. ieee ents sation scene y eg a Oe germen with a sessile than the petals, and an elliptical ee DIEG M0, 737 iF ry bee rae ay ee eho SO Fa Cee, e oat Cie ao Vs 2) aint distinguished by its aromatic smell. a similar smell to that o sword-shaped, bright-green, with odour of myrtle leaves. the unlike not ; fainter but the root, the spike, Ne SHC ty ao a pa eS ee ‘ - Oe les ) ce) much that, being trodden upon, is entirely strewed with this plant, which, are constructed in perfumes the whole building; and bowers , and stuck with cythe streets, of its leaves, neatly platted ranunculus. The phers or other devices made of the garden the country people dried root powdered is successfully used by in Norfolk as a cure for the ague. many long radicles, easily The root is thick and spongy, with Leaves upright, ie Be ae ad CSRsAC te : pe <SC - ee . . .. , sation oer TS ; 7 . i re ” 2, Ped Pa De a Pe a Pa EG _ abs EN OS ne very long, and leaf-like. Huds. Linn. Sp. Pl. 462. Acorus Calamus. Syn. Cant. Reth. 357. Arr. With. Bot. Fl. An. 147. 472. Bot. Med. Woodv. Sibth. Ox. 112. 140. 474. 1. v. Kew. Hort. Dryandr. in Ait. t.173. 437. A. verus, sive Calamus Officinarum. Rati Syn. aee 2AO) Pe Lee ae DF %%,, A 7a Hy ed Pe ree he evr vwvete Po 5 Sata - ti ; i Ce r Wr A APy OR SeGtn OKO Ciel ks Oh Toa "*Fe5. Re I REGENi a) arash iiionstiahe r U DHS ‘ OS 144 % ae 2 $ ee he POOL at ta HOGso? eS Adhere 22h dL ce Ce ie OR EOL te ca Z ihe ale °? OCRed R LS ~~ ee eee the ek ; a Cte ie eee te . t A ite POL sei seach Sis i nse ki= , io i x OeJ ae e wah 67854. DEG tO) 0, NCS * St 7 e 4 DE S Cae DIES eg a A eee*9 | l 7 : eure, Pon dae(s -Mcaedek (> Pi ed y VF TT ae MNCeH 4 nn ake hoe, ACO ia ak A KG °° 3 ae ee ww . % a ain heatig@, eer 2 7A bare SD a> Age” a a Ae Cee Cae AAS i) an PPL aC) 29a iis ms c U “(2 *@5, OS Ae 7s " ba ee le, ON a. 6 bsPa © a SesFAr Vis ao a ra > td be Ti] ro . al ca per Me. Pri an ‘e@ sec “> *)AKCS = apr "Be * be ae Bh a eT, e ringCla 2 EN Aaxie D Se, EA pre "sox fe “a. LP ee te a7; (A bt OO pe ee De cee '® ¢ a Ars Aric) eee resist at . y,' HG, DG . ES aquatica. Ore aor i hs LIMOSELLA ty Set3 a aT) Caps. ry aon > / ABA 0 Fea dical, on simple flower-stalks, which become inflexed as the . se tS aon <) Py eee : ‘ 6*%D gig r%. * ; Pe AE Ae Re fruit ripens. Segments of the calyx sharp, the 2 uppermost least deeply divided. Corolla with a swelling tube; the limb in 5 equal segments, whitish without, red on the inside, the g uppermost of which are a little inflexed. Stamina ascending, divaricated in pairs towards each side of the flower. Style declining, with a blunt rough stigma. Capsule globular, wi = groove along its upper side. Seeds very numerous. |?] a ry «tae 2 ICR BE there a] aN iC LEAS Chea wn 7 > f Fs ! s op AT AL ol hd eas Met CR F EW persons, except the scrutinizing botanist, observe this little plant, which occasionally occurs in muddy places where water has stagnated during the preceding winter. The Rev. Mr. Abbot sent it from Bedfordshire, flowering in the middle of July, The root is annual, throwing out naked cylindrical prostrate Tunners, which take root at their extremities, and form new plants. Leaves radical, on long foot-stalks, spatulate, smooth, entire ; we have not found them involute. Flowers small, ra- Pee) 4 bs , ee COE he fi eiAV C 245. Sibth. Ox. 197. Plantaginella palustris. Raii Syn. 278. Pee Limosella aquatica. Linn. Sp. Pl. 881. Huds. Fl, An. 276. With. Bot. Arr.656. Relh. Cant. Ge, DIES Me! Wr w>aty ee a 4 ro SYN. ¢) Zz r Osh Oh ot with one cell, two valves, and many seeds. SPEC. CHAR. pre Cor. five-cleft, equal. CR Cal. five-cleft. Stamina approaching each other in pairs. CEN p = ‘3 ihe: “te. Or Oo Grn. Cuar. Angiospermia. Be ary DIDYNAMIA Cibo, , Ww Oh et a) OE eer ef 73 c Mudwort. Pa A SP ors ta, 3126, ah ie en | TTA alsa WY = an _ Cs — = a9 a aCe Le sek} “ == a OG Oe Maks a Oi Oh:a Chie ye eas A To Cd a % Pr) Oty Pie ae Pia abs ied PEALO ae : 6 oe IE ties nr ae ye thd rea Ce ma Pe ~ COE en Oe OE on ak eat ‘see e tet iL gt . EBao OMele iar anna Yo Oe ai a ] nO ° ro ae : : pe i DE OD way: Rac Mit tO ke eS ro s, ae) eed a Te a? 66, pe a FOR LS ee 25 Pe ae4 Ie a & ¥, bE bsee ao tie) @. 4 ‘ a CS e Pa > Pe ’ ead ae So. ae\ Aer P "son le Se. Nee 7K le ~ ®,, S, A abs P85Py 55 8 OMe Ophrys. s Mountain Diandria. a We a GYNANDRIA Cher WE. ry oa DSK Gee.) >, VT “i Heart-leaved cordata. KG "Ie, ee?) iy 2 OPHRYS by aC hats *% Rie Pena oot y” thes e 3 Ly} a ek ok EN rata) dt aC 26 Nectary consisting of a lip only, slightly Cuar. -carinated at the back. Root of clustered fleshy fibres. A pair Spec. Cuar. of heart-shaped leaves on the stem. Nectary with four lobes. Huds. Linn. Sp. Pl. 1340. Ophrys cordata. Syn. ‘ With. Bot. Arr. 988. Fl. An. 388. " Bifolium minimum. Raii Syn. 385. Cah) NEC Mide re) el719 Eoah S >) 2al me 7) arn. F * “se | x iC are ° or SNE ee oe a ie et Gen. PD) ae a most assiduous investigator of the vegetable crea- Ri i NPL Bec or July. The capsule is globose, purplish, 4 aCe a) me ads ne a 4y ieee, Cee oa Ne sj eI ed 5 ee crowned with the SEA aS ts <@ Ps Pt Be < Ct Doe Be S = cert Wiehe ’ aad by lateral clefts. permanent withering corolla, and bursting rn 4 © 7 KG nectary. ee Ce e common lobes this species is essentially distinguished from the form of the leaves), Ophrys ovata (not to mention size, or the 1 that part of its which has only very slight prominences a A EP [aan By these first-mentioned two longer ones of the same figure. eee a) be Oy . = a ca Pad pointed, smooth, veiny leaves. Spike terminal, upright, whose composed of numerous green inconspicuous flowers, petals are spreading, equal m length, the2 innermost only being narrower than the rest, and all often tinged with brown. having 2 exLip of the nectary long, dependent, yellowish, half way into tended linear lobes at the base, and being cloven 1 bearing about its middle a pair of opposite, heart-shaped, LW) or nese emanate PP Pre) | The root is not much unlike those of Ophioglossum vulgatum and Osmunda lunaria; we suspect it to be, like those, truly perennial, and not forming a cluster of fibres one year which are totally obliterated (while a new cluster 1s forming) the next. Stem solitary, angular, 4 or 5 inches high, simple, erect, Baa DS SRE DE DIK southtion, who gathered it on the high turfy moors to the west of that town, as indicated by Dr. Smith in W ithering’s Bot. Arr. It grows in moist, shady spots, flowering in June 3PAGie Sheffield, me this rare alpine plant we are obliged to Mr. Salt of F OR be Pie = OS oC res Ce DS Ss . Cia aren 5 la GOL email ~ aCe Xs = ® iF ae bacsahs ghd OK eae S$). 2 D7KG av 77 * e a o a) LS Pe x a w Oe . ¢ Ree AT . ie : ee Carte Oe ad *% as7°8 BEC > eae os nD, RAE Ce OM ; MOE AT oa , ; CCRT E : Ca DES = : $ ; ; : “eg DES 2) ¢ ee FP Pine hk sh iia Ne SP : aon , a . * De ake ‘Wiehe Oh ENS ee) Me OGhee te DHS DEG Pye A a, o OSES > af DIK td Sq, ’ a) ie ts Pee es v KGta p8s 0 DKS ri.) Hee IKETeas MoEoN 0, DEC i J Fred *? a a i 2 ote Or ey, oe de Ne ee as = if "6. re ed A ISS | - BS Sef “Gg oie il th Oe ete ras CUM id ee ee ae 7 OY eS ait Ke NO, SP | ee WHR . Se ee lod AVie. a 9 Ses darie c a FA ®) E SS re vA al Pte? Pea BSG € dS mC “2tp S A aor CR) Ai Sas 2 ye by ds, vee ea HW) Water-moss. L cd Musei. + ae) CRYPTOGAMIA ty FS bal’ Greater antipyretica. bs Fa Cae QHSeA*Fe, DHOé(y f7 39 “bad FONTINALIS POOL a. ue YF 359 ] Gen. Syn. a if ca ae Nor 4 oN Py Ps E + te a aes x Ie Wr POL re Sea) J ie 6) AYA 228 Te i ve > SEAS ea | ek oy ay Pras We oF Cheese i > ete S40, Ae i.¢ rN “(5° ad et ee ee i 3 ae ie a ee oS ee a vra {Pars 3 el 1.» A long, clothed with numerous leaves, which are imbricated generally in three rows, of an ovate sharp-pointed form, but compressed so as to become acutely carinated, entire in the margin, their colour a deep transparent green. Capsules lateral, solitary, on very short scaly flower-stalks, elliptical, entirely invested with imbricated scales, and their orifice ciliated with about 16 red taper teeth. The lid is conical, and the veil of the same form, but rather longer. Linnzeus informs us, in his Flora Suecica, that the Swedes “ stuff in this moss between their chimneys and wooden walls, to guard the latter from fire :”” a passage which English writers have greatly misapprehended ; for, without supposing any thing very incombustible in its nature, it may answer the purpose above described merely by preventing the passage of air. tt Py iF tough and wiry, much branched, from 3 or 4 inches to a foot | a7 2 2 6 j <i Cie + uncommon in slow deep waters, growing upon rocks, posts, &c. floating with the stream considerably below the surface, and very rarely producing any fructification. The root is small, but strong, and perennial. Stem slender, or ¥ if ae 3 2 cS ey) aad) ° J ara ay aS & bh] ¥; ae Fructification lateral, Fontinalis antipyretica. Linn. Sp. Pl. 1571. Fluds. Fl. An. 467. With. Bot. Arr. v. 3.75. Reth. Cant. 395. Sibth. Ox. 293. F, major, foliis triangularibus complicatis, capitulis in foliorum alis sessilibus. Raii Syn. 79. F, triangularis major complicata, e foliorum alis capsulifera. Dill. Musc. 254. i. 33. f. 1. +a . keel, disposed in three ranks. ENSf)aCTl) ot ee, De wae ? rr ee Car. Capsule with a lid and veil, sessile, en: closed in an imbricated calyx. Spec. Cuar. Leaves pointed, folded so as to form a ~ ae orp VF) the vw (Ome SRE aeoO Ca ee See > 2 Oe "e, ie©)sg? = OR edDEROe ee 5 i eS Fane ae OT AC the a ene Cie ao ICY aoe DeGtey Ee Aaa he ee So eae) Ci ce TP NY ed PALO Oe SEPP ae LT Peer a7 ie eRe 7. | Te 8 } sie OPES oOo Pag aS io DIES co eer) ROE Lo DRG oe ee wo 5 Pee NG tr my VE ydCi Booman OO Ae oneON IS OE ns OM PAE “S07 at Cs Pa INS 2 * D Sea ai ee ems a as > Tn autho ee OY ee ee ld \ 4 my on. DSK ese Fi ay 9 DSK, ' a DG iat OME Ge nmee ry we 7 ? ad oy ba ) ee eS 5 ‘ %e,, ee ce pa ba Nig $6 DAG /4y €) 4 “Sg. 86 vie Se a % a er aC) ae at 9 cr hed od a ©. Pe evalC) SS < eet "lad Ais 1 Ge] Le as a as 1 KC ba hd wr ze “85, a> ers ak Lr om vo Ps o Af ee 7 pie aU) Se. Gh ies ae p< riIEG lg AF kl! PUL SS ice OR >)RP eae i ag oa | be a Five £9 br baad C) la SO ba IN Peon So eS ha aaa ao 7 a4 ©; St "7-6 *%te. 85, SSN ea var Sa BRYUM ] EN 360 iN iC ee [ CR PN Fe: J .) \ a Pt ~ bo] aOR 7 Re earneum. Veilsmooth. AO yi Musci. Flower. ws Fl. An. 489. er “Sears ate AEP POAC) Fite ee ro TA #) Ve ae) ey, stalk from a terminal tubercle. Spec. Cuar. Capsules pendulous, somewhat globular. Leaves alternate, acute, and entire. Syn. Bryum carneum. Linn. Sp. Pl. 1587. Huds. With. Bot. Arr. v. 3. 119. ” a WV a PSC) \ G)\ AZ 228 “ses a er mals | a) av i mC io so nal 7 , B. nitidum, foliis Serpilli pellucidis angustioribus, reflexis capitulis subrotundis, carnei coloris, in pediculis brevioribus. Raii Syn. 102. B. lanceolatum pellucidum, capsulis rotundis, pendulis, carneis. Dill. Musc. 400. t. 50. f. 69. a G SENT from Cambridgeshire by the Rev. Mr. Hemsted. =‘ aa bad OF A i Oe Che a eed 9 Au \Cles ®,.5 AL eee FAL m0 be Ot pee ee "a Oe i ay aa Che Pa) aie oe Or It is © are OES Ohta 3 Or 0 Ci SEF ded ee ova ea an uncommon, and not generally known species, growing in moist shady places, among grass, and by the margins of little ills, bearing its fruit in the spring. Root perennial. Stems short, slender, simple at first, clothed with thick-set, alternate, lanceolate, pointed, entire leaves, of a bright pellucid green. Stalk terminal, a little longer than the stems, reddish, shining, pellucid and succulent. Capsule pendulous, when young green, pear-shaped and very obtuse, with a depressed lid; but as it ripens becoming of a fleshcoloured red, and when arrived at maturity the orifice is much dilated, so that in some specimens the capsule may by called almost campanulate. Our figure is not in that advanced state. The veil we have not seen. Dillenius represents it as awlShaped and very tender, falling off the young capsules before they begin to nod. When the fruit is ripe, young shoots are protruded from the top of the stem, so that the fruit-stalks are no longer terminal. We have compared ours with the specimens of Dillenius. ane rs yf CRYPTOGAMIA Caps. with a lid. car) ie p So Wr ald a Cth ve Cie - Or = Cie ee ee 3 oO Bing Nh re Oe ee One OS OeACGPeea) ee See7 ae ee ) ee ay Gen. Cuar. ee rar OWT ee ea Ly or Shining Bryum. ie ee Ps DRG pe ey a a » pee a ad tt i @ 7 pie es ‘a ~ i be oe Fae os —e es POP x re A. mm Cal eya Pa 2 Pd aC) Ps ba oe Zo we {se P ra Ae é “e,. nt 2) Bao ad, Ao te M2 Hier ENE Fatal ea a wr SEG “TYc\e er? Fat) iC Rie ey + We ) id A W » a TO ar V. LO cd Tre VOL. Cotyledon Umbilicus — — Dodecandria. Lythrum hyssopifoliu Reseda luteola _ lutea — _ Euphorbia strictaa — Icosandria. Crategus torminalis Sorbus Aucuparia Pyrus domestica VJ id %% Ew som G\Als vse Poe Oa NC) 318 329 330 359 354 $42 360 299 353 345 300 341 293 294 305 324 “ — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — PoOhier te at hdna Cryptogamia. Osmunda Lunaria — Buxbaumia foliosa = — Phascum curvicolum — Fontinalis antipyretica Bryum scoparium hygrometricum carneum _ Sphzrocarpus terrestris Lichen plumbeus _ nigrescens _ Burgessii = — perlatus — glomuliferus — lzte-virens _ ———_ resupinatus —_ Tremella granulata — — —_ 2 ihe ee pe os * ‘ o alll NPL) iv G i Pi OE rT} x a) ba TWN 3 aC) Res a 1S Ar any G ag rye — _ 3803 304 Cie rae Dianthus Armeria Silene noctiflora — — i hd he Decandria. ——_——_--- perennis Polygamia. Acer Pseudo-platanus campestre _ — ay eo — Scleranthus annuus 306 307 _—_ = aN Octandria. Epilobium palustre Vaccinium Oxycoccos — — Carex ovalis -vulpina e hare * ¥ Ly ee rm. eae) é oo . 289 358 Monecia. — Acorus Calamus —_ Alisma ranunculoides — — — Gynandria. Satyrium repens _ Ophrys cordata — — DIE MMe, 6} Asparagus officinalis 349 338 301 — Artemisia campestris Solidago Virgaurea éya2 ), \ <j 90, 4 — — — Syngenesia. eh ¢ C og 295 296 Hieracitum sabaudum Hexandria. rT — — te G6 Convolvulus arvensis -sepium — Soldanella Campanula latifolia — Oenanthe pimpinelloides — peucedanifolia Viburnum Lantana _ Opulus _ Statice reticulata _ on <9 is 334 OES a rep ra a G> rs — OO a 322 oe GOOLE o a — =< . Fs b 327 309 — Beata al Pentandria. J — — —_— Monadelphia. Geranium pheum _ Diadelphia. Vicia sativa _ — Polyadelphia. Hypericum perforatum -- dubium Tetrandria. Cornus suecica _ Potamogeton pectinatum a Iberis nudicaulis Dentaria bulbifera Oo MOE — _ — _ 357 ON _ Dactylis glomerata Cynosurus cristatus Lolium perenne — — a Se — Didynamia. Limosella aquatica =~ Tetradynamia. = —= Fog ees 7 r a0 ad Nardus stricta Briza media o ~ eer rr. a ita Cat) =e Eriophorum alpinu —_ — Tab. 297 355 308 Anemone nemorosa Adonis autumnalis Triandria. Crocus sativus vernus — — — Aquilegia vulgaris we Se Bi * eS Fe br) OY aa vulgaris Dh 8 & Polyandria. Monandria. Cuara ee rs Or ye INDEX OAL SYSTEMATICAL RP a Pie hd Othe Pore SCI ROL TD: 3 es DRG DEC, D Ba Obata Ms Be a e. ye 2 eS 2, sL7°*%G, arse) CT © BUD) ay #). a act San Wa i ee e on ~~ nr ae n Sg ? 3 — pa rt m Pe os " DQAer-se. on anil Chains sgt a) Ss Wat a ® ! ee POU a Pies a Sad ae |a ee ay ea ID Nisgl Avie i“Ses4Ae ee sexe, ove re es. id ee ad ed _ OFaA a > rs - 7 ALPHABETICAL INDEX iw Me ORL Chern 4 eX ar 6 hee] ML Ne > 4 G% a) cd a6 TO Fontinalis antipyretica — JAS WV 3 Cha Oe J, iz red ahr) D G ey —_ Statice reticulata = ‘Tremella granulata — os Vaccinium Oxycocc = Viburnum Lantana — wr *s oe) a ¢° Pere Tes D ‘05,5 TE Sphzrocar pus terrestris on) C eT eae — — re G4 a v RS Opulus en o Vicia sativa _ ee perennis _— — gn ——— Silene noctiflora Solidago Virgaurea Sorbus Aucuparia —_ aaa Satyrium repens Scleranthus annuus ar SePes €g! Onley AKUY Ca AZ ee ee aC ru? i s ee >) osSS wa a ‘A Me 5 NS Geranium pheum Hieracium sabaudum _~ RN DK? Epilobium palustre Eriophorum alpinum Euphorbia stricta = — — Cie) Dianthus Armeria _ Potamogeton pectinatum . CPL _ —_ —_ Pyrus domestica Reseda lutea acini’ Hatedla a ) he ee — — ene vernus —_ Ophrys cordata Osmunda Lunaria Phascum curvicollum 7 7 o Pe Ce =a Cratzgus torminalis _ Crocus sativus Cynosurus cristatus Dactylis glomerata Dentaria bulbifera — pimpinelloides LEE _ Soldanella — Cornus suecica Cotyledon Umbilicus Oenanthe peucedanifolia TALE — —- sepium ate Nardus stricta — EL — —- —_ Chara vulgaris Convolvulus arvensis MG **e,D iF ovalis ——-vulpina —_ ULLAL é See’ Campanula latifolia Carex = foliosa Buxbaumia plumbeus resupinatus ULL o nigrescens perlatus _ Limosella aquatica = — Lolium perenne Lythrum hyssopifolium EP EULER 3@ 7 3/~) ——— EEE _ Bryum carneum hygrometricum — scoparium f ; — — Briza media — — Asparagus officinalis gy ELIE Artemisia campestris EL TT LELR Aquilegia vulgaris glomuliferus lete-virens PEEL — Lichen Burgessii — — PLIST Adonis autumnalis ere -- perforatum —_ Iberis nudicaulis -- Pseudo-platanus — Calamus Alisma ranunculoides Anemone nemorosa — Hypericum dubium — A CER campestre Acorus Sg ~ a Me DEG DS @ ppre 0, DHS eG 7 yy . 0 C D> Oe = Ce eo SNe Abs 4% nF pe " i Bis Mee 3 yee ee NY Ne — en a a S85 r Ls)yy ia eC a Oe i o PRA het Ni 2. ‘ Pat Ne OM 9 3 Fi Per aE COME tes) ae OU “Se LS i Tie OS ee Cle er Pad Sat b 7) Ae% es a7 @,Au/r*° vA ed TO bs ’ So Aa) of5 ENGLISH NAMES arr THE ae 6 OF oe oP IN DEX — — 338 299 333 303 324 seo" ADO ary a SCY CA *%, I 7 O46 is! “G ow ee) te ST iC : sys Pry Oh a er Ce San, eva) Csur2%95 SH 6) G ic Mee 5 Na Flag, sweet — Golden-rod, common — Gras-spoly, hyssop-leaved Guelder-rose, common — mealy —_ Hawkweed, shrubby — Knawel, annual _ - perennial _ field - _ Southernwood, 330 308 317 326 323 340 337 315 343 296 295 289 350 a water _ Sphzrocarpus, reticulated Spurge, upright warty Sycamore Tremella, granulated Vetch, common Water-moss, greater Wayfaring-tree _ Willow-herb, narrow marsh Yellow-weed _ Pi v ti ri ea ae) ee Ss. asc <}oy os we Ss. 7 ee OO i. : Elder, crooked — Pheasant’s-eye — Pink, Deptford Plantain, lesser water Pond-weed, fennel-leaved Quaking-grass, commo _ Quicken-tree a Rye-grass _ oe Saffron Saint John’s-wort, imperforate ——_—-- perforated Satyrion, creeping = = Service-tree, domestic SEN. ye ri Phascum, 2 ae} > iC} — a — ON great Catchfly, night-flowering Chara, common _ Cock’s-foot grass, rough Columbine, common —_ Coral-wort, bulbiferous Cornel, dwarf _ Cotton-grass, alpine Cranberr _ Cranesbill, dusky Crocus, autumnal spring Darnel, perennial _ Dog’s-tail grass, crested Dropwort, parsley water - sulphurwort water— Dyer’s-weed _ be —-- .\) ‘ar-) — SsiC leafy aS Buxbaumia, Candy-tuft, naked-stalked Carex, oval-spiked, or naked 7 ° * i411 44114444 ~~ 6 345 294 300 353 341 306 304 303 290 32} 318 357 325 358 PTTETiLi dt giant bat’s-wing, or blackish— bright-green = — —— crowned _ ——— lead-coloured spongy — —— pearly reversed — _ Maple, common _ meee GTeater _ — Mat-grass ~ Mignonette, wild —_ ~— Moonwort _ = Mudwort — Navel-wort, common Ophrys, heart-leaved mountain eee ->* a 3 Bell-flower, Bind-weed, great -- sea oe small —_ Bryum, broom _ shining — yellow twisting -— 328 — 293 Dees mountain Asparagus, common Base-rocket =~ PA LETILLIFEP LEA E14 rie Ash, Tab. —~ — at Sis ra v1 iC ee) Lavender, matted sea Lichen, ball-bearing id he CiePee) Anonis, corn Anemone, wood CCR © . Sre4 i way iy Cie 4 Te wee rs ) SF a e IN VOL. V. a) = Sale? 4 *e9, ©) oN C a ae IT aes 9) 4 DL 226°, i JA ta DAO Cost DIES IK "Pe BS vieCake ROE aC) aCe Seno Oe Ce AC) mT RE 6 Ome: i Mee PRBoot”ee 509 poe c (a “tee As . QAR ts LAS - ea AKG : eg le : Ss Ne ’ a bAe DK ° eee At oe eure ToL =. Oa de eu Br ee 0 e te : POE CAROL 5 CML CEL e Che ee : Re PP ORO EO " 7 = te Ste A“ ede ASO DEGC**e, $ r a Sel ? Z “et ed eee 7) Ae °o. re {e 2 © ca %, -°*e Lo) FoN hay “Sea oe Ay Sia Se. f 38s is Oi Sted PR cS Beene Peat) aa Ce EGAC (e*Se, oy OeAAG % Bg rc) we Pa. Fa SR aid ate OT dP a CROLL C) ak) rw - PtPy DK fae Oe NG Cra ed Ce Oe Te > ee sO wore ted ® CeeVe ee ei, ieee, pet Cite ed s OL Ch CaS Cee Pe Be eae DS Ck DY A Ae osx ¢ te 3 Aa & ad Sar oo 3 Oe ee Che Sey ag TO a eg ee e ®; WS ie ; i rs phe = fate Ba PoeCte aL Cie ¥9 4 3a SK, 9. 5... 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Contributors | Smith, James Edward, Sir, 1719-1828 |
Date | 1796 |
Type | Text |
Format | application/pdf |
Language | eng |
Spatial Coverage | England |
Rights Management | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Holding Institution | J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah |
Scanning Technician | Easton Madsen |
Call Number | QK306 .S73 v.5 |
ARK | ark:/87278/s6cc6zh9 |
Setname | uum_rbc |
ID | 1694463 |
Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6cc6zh9 |